| Literature DB >> 30189859 |
Joanna W Szopinska1, Raphaële Gresse2, Saskia van der Marel3, Jos Boekhorst4, Sabina Lukovac4, Iris van Swam4, Barbara Franke1,3, Harro Timmerman4, Clara Belzer5, Alejandro Arias Vasquez6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effects of gut microbiota on human traits are expected to be small to moderate and adding the complexity of the human diseases, microbiome research demands big sample sizes. Fecal samples for such studies are mostly self-collected by participants at home. This imposes an extra level of complexity as sample collection and storage can be challenging. Effective, low-burden collection and storage methods allowing fecal samples to be transported properly and ensuring optimal quality and quantity of bacterial DNA for upstream analyses are necessary. Moreover, accurate assessment of the microbiome composition also depends on bacterial DNA extraction method. The aim of this study was to evaluate the reliability and efficiency of the OMNIgene•GUT kit as a participant-fecal friendly collection method (storage at room temperature for 24 h (O24h) or 7 days (O7d)) in comparison to the standard collection method (Fresh, storage at 4 °C for less than 24 h) in terms of amount of variability and information content accounting for two common DNA extraction methods.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial DNA extraction; Fecal collection and storage method; Microbiome; Next generation sequencing; OMNIgene•GUT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30189859 PMCID: PMC6127955 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-018-1249-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Primers and probes used to carry out real time PCR quantification of Bacteroides spp., Bifidobacterium spp. and Clostridium cluster IV
| Target | Name | Sequence | Amplicon Length | Concentration nM | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clostridium cluster IV | sg-Clep-F | GCA CAA GCA GTG GAG T | 239 | 400 | [ |
| sg-Clep-R | CTT CCT CCG TTT TGT CAA | 400 | |||
| Clep-Pa | (FAM)-AGG GTT GCG CTC GTT-(TAMRA) | 200 | |||
| Bifidobacterium spp. | F-bifido | CGCGTCYGGTGTGAAAG | 244 | 300 | [ |
| R-bifido | CCCCACATCCAGCATCCA | 300 | |||
| MGB-bifido | (FAM)-AACAGGATTAGATACCC-(MGB) | 200 | |||
| Bacteroides spp. | AllBac296f | GAG AGG AAG GTC CCC CAC | 106 | 400 | [ |
| AllBac412r | CGC TAC TTG GCT GGT TCA G | 400 | |||
| AllBac375Bhqr | (FAM)-CCA TTG ACC AAT ATT CCT CAC TGC TGC CT-(TAMRA) | 200 |
Target Selected species (spp.) tested with qPCR, Name Name of primers and probes used to amplify Target, Sequence primers/probes sequence, Amplicon length the PCR product size of the Target in base pars (bp), Concentration nM concentration of the primers/probes needed to perform experiment, nM nanomolar, Ref. references where the method is described
DNA quantification and purification values. Mean values with standard deviation (SD) for DNA concentration and purity of fecal samples collected and stored by three different collection/storage methods (Fresh, O24h, O7d) and extracted using two different procedures (PF, QIA)
| NanoDrop measurements (mean ± SD) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| DNA concentration, ng/μL | 260 nm/280 nm ratio | 260 nm/230 nm ratio | |
| Fresh + QIA | 304.60 ± 106.35 | 1.86 ± 0.02 | 1.67 ± 0.20 |
| O24h + QIA | 267.22 ± 98.38a | 1.88 ± 0.01 | 1.66 ± 0.16b |
| O7d + QIA | 223.27 ± 100.03 | 1.88 ± 0.02 | 1.60 ± 0.19 |
| O24h + PF | 41.31 ± 32.52a | 2.09 ± 0.39 | 1.02 ± 0.50b |
The ratios of absorbance at 260 nm/280 nm and 260 nm/230 nm are used to assess the purity of DNA. A ratio of ~ 1.8 is generally accepted as “pure” for DNA. If the ratio is appreciable lower, it may indicate the presence of contaminants (e.g. proteins, phenols or carbohydrates) (13, 14). aIs the comparison of DNA concentration (column labeled DNA concentration, ng/μL) and bof DNA purity (column labeled 260 nm/230 nm ratio) between QIA and PF DNA extraction methods (Bonferroni-adjusted paired sample t-test with P < 0.001 for all tests)
Fig. 1Shannon diversity index of fecal samples collected/stored with three different collection and storage methods (Fresh, O24h, O7d) and extracted using two different procedures (PF, QIA) (***P > 0.001); results determined by sequencing analysis
Fig. 2Relative abundance of bacterial taxa at the phylum level in fecal samples collected/stored with three different methods (Fresh, O24h, O7d) and extracted using two different procedures (PF, QIA); results determine by sequencing analysis. Statistical comparisons were performed based on the paired sample t-test. * red bar statistically different from light-blue bar (P < 0.05); ¶ blue bar statistically different from green bar (P < 0.05)
Phylum relative abundance of each samples extracted using two different DNA extraction methods and collected with three different procedures; results determined by sequencing analysis
| Mean of phyla relative abundance (%) ± standard error of the mean | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Collection + DNA extraction methods | Firmicutes | Bacteroidetes | Actinobacteria | Cyanobacteria | Proteobacteria |
| Fresh + QIA | 77.82 ± 7.22 | 11.25 ± 6.23 | 8.90 ± 4.28 | 0.05 ± 0.09 | 0.72 ± 0.46 |
| O24h + QIA | 72.10 ± 11.09 | 20.52 ± 11.39 | 4.89 ± 2.38 | 0.74 ± 1.32 | 1.26 ± 0.76 |
| O7d + QIA | 75.52 ± 9.43 | 16.63 ± 10.46 | 5.20 ± 4.26 | 0.90 ± 1.67 | 1.20 ± 0.83 |
| O24h + PF | 46.52 ± 16.21 | 46.94 ± 17.71 | 0.54 ± 0.42 | 1.95 ± 3.12 | 2.94 ± 1.49 |
First column refers to the tested collection/storage and DNA extraction methods in the paper. The other columns represent relative abundance of the phyla that were investigated
Fig. 3Relative abundance of bacterial phyla of O24h samples treated with QIA (a) and PF (b) DNA extraction kits; results determined by sequencing analysis. All phyla showed statistically significant differences between two DNA extraction methods (Bonferroni-adjusted Wilcoxon signed-rank test; P < 0.05 for all tests)
Fig. 4PCA (Principal Component Analysis) plots of bacterial genera relative abundance of 14 individual faecal samples clustered regarding collection and storage methods (Fresh, O24h, O7d) (a) or DNA extraction methods (PF, QIA) (b). The first two components explained 22.56% and 18.86% of the variance, respectively (A) and 23.10% and 18.62% of the variance, respectively (b). Faecal collection methods are represented by circle (●) for Fresh, square (■) for O24h, and triangle (▲) for O7d (a). DNA extraction methods are represented by circle (●) for QIA, and square (■) for PF (b); results determined by sequencing analysis
Fig. 5Log base 10 of gene copy number per gram of feces of Bacteroides spp. a, Bifidobacterium spp. b and Clostridium cluster IV (c) quantified by real-time PCR for the different collection and DNA extraction kits (***P < 0.001)
Comparison of the microbiome storage studies carried out since 2014
| Number of individuals | Time of RT storage | Design | DNA extraction method | Techniques | Conclusion | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 72 h | Comparison of OMNIgene·GUT/ RNA later/ Tris-EDTA buffer storage methods | MoBio Powelyser Powersoil DNA Isolation Kit | Illumina MiSeq 16S rRNA | Least alteration from OMNIgene·GUT | [ |
| 3 | 3 days | Comparison of RNAlater storage at RT for 3 days vs. storage at -80 °C | MO BIO Powelyser Powersoil DNA isolation kit | 454 sequencing of 16S rRNA | RNAlater tend to show lower diversity and purity | [ |
| 18 (IBS-IBD patients + controls) | 24 h | Comparison between storage at RT for 24 h/ storage at + 4 °C for 24 h/ storage at -20 °C for one week vs. storage at -80 °C | PSP lysis buffer+ beat-beating+ PSP Spin stool kit | 454 sequencing of 16S RNA + qPCR on | No significant differences between the storage at RT for 24 h, storage at 4 °C for 24 h and storage at -20 °C for one week. | [ |
| 4 | 15 or 30 min | Comparison between storage at RT for 15 min vs. 30 min vs. no buffer | Qiagen stool Mini kit+ Bead-beating | qPCR | Fecal samples should be frozen within 15 min counting from collection. | [ |
| 41 (19 elderly + 22 infants) | 7 or 14 days | Storage at RT within OMNIgene·GUT kit for 7 or 14 days vs. fresh samples | RBB | Ilumina MiSeq + PicoGreen | OMNIgene·GUT kit did not significantly impact microbiota composition and diversity in elderly datasets after 7d of storage. It can be used instead of fresh method. | [ |
| 14 | 24 h and 7 days | Comparison of storage at RT within OMNIgene·GUT for 24 h or 7 days vs freezing + comparison of two DNA extraction method | MO BIO Power Fecal DNA Isolation Kit vs. Qiagen QIAmp DNA Stool Mini kit+ bead-beating | Illumina MiSeq 16S RNA + qPCR on | Significant influence of DNA extraction method + no influence of storage within OMNIgene·GUT and between OMNIgene·GUT vs. Fresh in terms of microbial diversity and quantity | Our study |
Number of individuals number of subjects used in the reference/our study, time of RT storage time of the storage of reference/our samples at room temperature (RT), Design short description of the tested aim, DNA extraction method method used for DNA extraction of fecal samples, Techniques name of the method used for microbial analysis, Conclusion the main point referring storage method, Ref. references where the method is described, EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, IBS Irritable bowel syndrome, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, qPCR quantitative polimerase chain reaction, RBB repeat bead beating