| Literature DB >> 30834331 |
Zigui Chen1,2, Pak Chun Hui2, Mamie Hui1,2, Yun Kit Yeoh1,2, Po Yee Wong2, Martin C W Chan2, Martin C S Wong1,3, Siew C Ng1,4,5, Francis K L Chan1,4, Paul K S Chan1,2.
Abstract
Proper preservation of stool samples to minimize microbial community shifts and inactivate infectious agents is important for self-collected specimens requiring shipment to laboratories when cold chain transport is not feasible. In this study, we evaluated the performance of six preservation solutions (Norgen, OMNI, RNAlater, CURNA, HEMA, and Shield) for these aspects. Following storage of human stool samples with these preservatives at room temperature for 7 days, three hypervariable regions of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene (V1-V2, V3-V4, and V4) were amplicon sequenced. We found that samples collected in two preservatives, Norgen and OMNI, showed the least shift in community composition relative to -80°C standards compared with other storage conditions, and both efficiently inhibited the growth of aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. RNAlater did not prevent bacterial activity and exhibited relatively larger community shift. Although the effect of preservation solution was small compared to intersubject variation, notable changes in microbiota composition were observed, which could create biases in downstream data analysis. When community profiles inferred from different 16S rRNA gene hypervariable regions were compared, we found differential sensitivity of primer sets in identifying overall microbial community and certain bacterial taxa. For example, reads generated by the V4 primer pair showed a higher alpha diversity of the gut microbial community. The degenerate 27f-YM primer failed to detect the majority of Bifidobacteriales. Our data indicate that choice of preservation solution and 16S rRNA gene primer pair are critical determinants affecting gut microbiota profiling. IMPORTANCE Large-scale human microbiota studies require specimens collected from multiple sites and/or time points to maximize detection of the small effects in microbe-host interactions. However, batch biases caused by experimental protocols, such as sample collection, massively parallel sequencing, and bioinformatics analyses, remain critical and should be minimized. This work evaluated the effects of preservation solutions and bacterial 16S rRNA gene primer pairs in revealing human gut microbiota composition. Since notable changes in detecting bacterial composition and abundance were observed among choice of preservatives and primer pairs, a consistent methodology is essential in minimizing their effects to facilitate comparisons between data sets.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rRNA gene; amplicon sequencing; bacterial culture; gut microbiota; preservative
Year: 2019 PMID: 30834331 PMCID: PMC6392095 DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00271-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSystems ISSN: 2379-5077 Impact factor: 6.496
FIG 1Workflow of the study design. Nine stool sample aliquots from each of the five donors were subjected to different preservatives and incubated at room temperature for 7 days to compare shifts in gut microbial community composition.
List of DNA/RNA preservation methods used in this study
| Name | Description | Producer | Catalogue no. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1_Standard | Stock immediately frozen at −80°C | ||
| 2_Norgen | Stool nucleic acid preservative | Norgen Biotek | 63700 |
| 3_OMNI | OMNIgene.GUT | DNA Genotek | OMR-200 |
| 4_RNAlater | RNAlater RNA stabilization reagent | Qiagen | 76106 |
| 5_CURNA | Homemade RNA preservative | ||
| 6_HEMA | HEMAgene.BUFFY COAT | DNA Genotek | HG-BCD-50 |
| 7_Shield | DNA/RNA shield transport medium | Zymo Research | R1100-50 |
| 8_PBS | Phosphate-buffered saline | Thermo Fisher | 10010023 |
| 9_CB | Cary-Blair transport medium | Puritan | CB-206 |
The original stocks (1_Standard) were immediately frozen at −80°C. All samples preserved in different solutions (samples 2 to 9) were incubated at room temperature for 7 days and then frozen at −80°C.
16S rRNA gene PCR primer sequences used in this study
| Region | Amplicon size (bp) | Name | Direction | Primer sequence (5′–3′) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V1-V2 | 349 | 27F-YM | Forward | AGAGTTTGATYMTGGCTCAG |
| 338R | Reverse | TGCTGCCTCCCGTAGGAGT | ||
| V3-V4 | 466 | 341F | Forward | CCTACGGGNGGCWGCAG |
| 806RB | Reverse | GGACTACNVGGGTWTCTAAT | ||
| V4 | 292 | 515F | Forward | GTGYCAGCMGCCGCGGTA |
| 806RB | Reverse | GGACTACNVGGGTWTCTAAT |
Mean amplicon size shown for hypervariable region amplified plus PCR primers.
FIG 2Community shift in nonpreserved stool samples in PBS or Cary-Blair transport medium observed by 16S rRNA gene V3-V4 amplicon sequencing. (A) Bar chart showing the proportion of the bacterial order. Filled triangles in red and blue represent nonpreserved samples in PBS (samples 8) and Cary-Blair transport medium (samples 9), respectively. The bacterial orders grouped into “Others” include Coriobacteriales, Desulfovibrionales, Pasteurellales, Synergistales, Victivallales, and Bacillales. (B) Principal-coordinate plot of weighted UniFrac distances discriminated nonpreserved stool samples from other aliquots in different preservatives (Table 1 gives detailed preservation methods for samples 1 to 7). (C) Principal-coordinate plot of unweighted UniFrac distances discriminated nonpreserved stool samples from other aliquots in different preservatives. (D to G) A pairwise Tukey HSD post hoc test shows an overgrowth of the relative abundance of Enterobacteriales and Fusobacteriales and a reduction of relative abundance of Clostridiales and Betaproteobacteriales in nonpreserved stool samples.
FIG 3Comparison of gut microbiota alpha diversity in different preservatives based on 16S rRNA gene V3-V4 amplicon sequencing. Alpha diversity analysis on amplicon sequence variant (ASV) (A) and genus (B) levels. Principal-coordinate plot using unweighted (C) and weighted (D) UniFrac distances, with sample clustering by individual subjects. The PC1 and PC2 axes represent the first two principal coordinates. KW test, Kruskal-Wallis test.
FIG 4Heat map comparing the proportional abundances of gut microbiota summarized at the order level between 16S rRNA gene primer pairs. Each column represents individuals with the proportional abundance on a base 10 logarithmic scale, with 0 (a log10 of 100%) in black and −4 (a log10 of 0.01%) in light silver. Each row represents the bacterial order. The clustering of subjects at the top is based on the weighted GUniFrac distance.
FIG 5(A and B) Unweighted (A) and weighted (B) UniFrac clustering of three 16S rRNA hypervariable regions using fragment insertion SATé-enabled phylogenetic placement (SEPP) technique. (C) Box plot of the Shannon diversity indices between 16S rRNA V1-V2, V3-V4, and V4 regions. Statistical significance was calculated using Kruskal-Wallis test. (D) Relative abundances (at the order level) of gut microbiota showing statistically significant differences between 16S rRNA V1-V2, V3-V4, and V4 regions. Taxa in red show statistical significance according to nonparametric Wilcoxon signed-rank test (P < 0.05) (see details in Table S4).
FIG 6Sequence variation of 16S rRNA gene primer-binding sites. (A) Schematic of the 16S rRNA gene regions and primer pairs. (B) Occurrences of the most commonly observed sequences of primer-binding sites and the primer formulations that they may match. Nucleotide sites identical to the most common consensus sequence (the first listed) are represented as dots. The main nucleotide changes of primer sequences from the most common consensus sequence are highlighted in red.