Literature DB >> 30552195

Towards Quantitative Microbiome Community Profiling Using Internal Standards.

Yajuan Lin1,2, Scott Gifford3, Hugh Ducklow4, Oscar Schofield5, Nicolas Cassar1,2.   

Abstract

An inherent issue in high-throughput rRNA gene tag sequencing microbiome surveys is that they provide compositional data in relative abundances. This often leads to spurious correlations, making the interpretation of relationships to biogeochemical rates challenging. To overcome this issue, we quantitatively estimated the abundance of microorganisms by spiking in known amounts of internal DNA standards. Using a 3-year sample set of diverse microbial communities from the Western Antarctica Peninsula, we demonstrated that the internal standard method yielded community profiles and taxon cooccurrence patterns substantially different from those derived using relative abundances. We found that the method provided results consistent with the traditional CHEMTAX analysis of pigments and total bacterial counts by flow cytometry. Using the internal standard method, we also showed that chloroplast 16S rRNA gene data in microbial surveys can be used to estimate abundances of certain eukaryotic phototrophs such as cryptophytes and diatoms. In Phaeocystis, scatter in the 16S/18S rRNA gene ratio may be explained by physiological adaptation to environmental conditions. We conclude that the internal standard method, when applied to rRNA gene microbial community profiling, is quantitative and that its application will substantially improve our understanding of microbial ecosystems.IMPORTANCE High-throughput-sequencing-based marine microbiome profiling is rapidly expanding and changing how we study the oceans. Although powerful, the technique is not fully quantitative; it provides taxon counts only in relative abundances. In order to address this issue, we present a method to quantitatively estimate microbial abundances per unit volume of seawater filtered by spiking known amounts of internal DNA standards into each sample. We validated this method by comparing the calculated abundances to other independent estimates, including chemical markers (pigments) and total bacterial cell counts by flow cytometry. The internal standard approach allows us to quantitatively estimate and compare marine microbial community profiles, with important implications for linking environmental microbiomes to quantitative processes such as metabolic and biogeochemical rates.
Copyright © 2019 American Society for Microbiology.

Keywords:  amplicon sequencing; community profiling; internal standard; marine microbiome

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30552195      PMCID: PMC6384117          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02634-18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  10 in total

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7.  Annual phytoplankton dynamics in coastal waters from Fildes Bay, Western Antarctic Peninsula.

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  10 in total

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