| Literature DB >> 31703372 |
Glen-Oliver F Gowers1,2,3, Oliver Vince1,4, John-Henry Charles1, Ingeborg Klarenberg5,6, Tom Ellis2,3, Arwyn Edwards7,8.
Abstract
Microbial communities in remote locations remain under-studied. This is particularly true on glaciers and icecaps, which cover approximately 11% of the Earth's surface. The principal reason for this is the inaccessibility of most of these areas due to their extreme isolation and challenging environmental conditions. While remote research stations have significantly lowered the barrier to studying the microbial communities on icecaps, their use has led to a bias for data collection in the near vicinity of these institutions. Here, miniaturisation of a DNA sequencing lab suitable for off-grid metagenomic studies is demonstrated. Using human power alone, this lab was transported across Europe's largest ice cap (Vatnajökull, Iceland) by ski and sledge. After 11 days of unsupported polar-style travel, a metagenomic study of a geothermal hot spring gorge was conducted on the remote northern edge of the ice cap. This tent-based metagenomic study resulted in over 24 h of Nanopore sequencing, powered by solar power alone. This study demonstrates the ability to conduct DNA sequencing in remote locations, far from civilised resources (mechanised transport, external power supply, internet connection, etc.), whilst greatly reducing the time from sample collection to data acquisition.Entities:
Keywords: expedition; metagenomics; microbial sequencing; nanopore; polar
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31703372 PMCID: PMC6896169 DOI: 10.3390/genes10110902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Contents of the sledge-based miniaturised laboratory.
| Reagents | Consumables | Hardware | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Qubit reagents | DNA Lo-bind tubes | Nanopore MinION device | Meat thermometer |
| Qubit standards | Qubit tubes | Tube racks | Temperature loggers (2) 1 |
| AMPure beads | Sterile sample bags | Dremel drill | Magnet |
| 80% ethanol | P1000 tips | DremelFuge adapter | Waste container |
| QIAGEN Powersoil kit | P200 tips | Hand-powered centrifuge | Laminated protocols |
| Nanopore LRK001 kit | P10 tips | Terralyser | Pen and notebook |
| Nanopore RAD004 kit | Nanopore flowcells | Qubit 4 | 90 W compact solar panel |
| Gloves | USB vortex | Dell XPS 13 laptop | |
| Parafilm | 20 Ah power packs (3) 1 | ||
| Falcon tubes | P1000 pipette | ||
| Hand warmers | P200 pipette | ||
| Sterile loops | P10 pipette | ||
A complete DNA sequencing laboratory is miniaturised into two 9 L boxes pulled by sledge and ski across the Vatnajökull ice cap, Iceland. The contents of the two 9 L boxes comprise a functioning DNA sequencing laboratory with components listed. 1, the number refers to quantity.
Figure 1Flowcells were maintained above freezing using body heat for the outbound eleven ski days. (A) Pulks (including the DNA sequencing equipment) were pulled by ski for seven days on the outbound journey to the “Base camp” on the northern edge of the ice cap. The return journey was reduced to four days due to more favourable ski and weather conditions. (B) Temperature log of the flowcells from leaving the UK to the start of the second sequencing run. During Day −4 the flowcells were kept in a polystyrene box with cool packs equilibrated to 4 °C and put in the hold during the flight. Days −3 to 0 were spent travelling to and staying at a hostel where flowcells were kept indoors at room temperature. Days 1 to 7 were spent traversing the icecap. Spikes in temperature correspond to night time where flowcells were kept inside the sleeping bag. Days 8 to 11 were spent at “Base camp” on the northern edge of the ice cap. Sequencing runs #1 and #2 (red lines) occurred at the base camp on Day 8 and Day 11.
Figure 2DNA extracted from Hveragil hot spring gorge. (A) 3D render of Hveragil hot spring gorge from a drone flight highlighting the location of sample collection (decimal degree (DD) coordinates: 64.683067, −16.527890). Render completed using footage from a Mavic Pro Drone (DJI, Shenzhen, China) and Pix4Dmapper software (Pix4D, Lausanne, Switzerland). (B) Landscape photograph indicating the location of sample collection “Hveragil gorge” and the base camp where DNA extraction and sequencing took place (“Sequencing lab”). (C) A photograph showing the set up for tent-based DNA extraction in a sleeping bag lab. Items displayed are labelled. Terralyzer for bead beating is omitted from the photograph.
Flowcell quality check results performed prior to expedition departure on Day −4 and also immediately prior to each sequencing run on Day 8 (Flowcell #1) and Day 11 (Flowcell #2).
| ID | Number of Active Pores | |
|---|---|---|
| Prior to Departure Day −4 | Prior to Sequencing Day 8 (#1) and 11 (#2) | |
| Flowcell #1 | 1375 | 1320 |
| Flowcell #2 | 1180 | 1183 |
Figure 3Two off-grid sequencing runs yielded almost 190 Mbp of data. (A) The solar power strategy for powering a laptop running Oxford Nanopore offline MinKNOW software (v18.12.9). Items shown are labelled. (B) Read length distribution for pooled sequencing runs. For simplicity only reads <5000 bp are shown.
Figure 4Metagenomic protein-level taxonomic identification from both sequencing runs combined. Kaiju output is shown for 44% of reads that successfully aligned to the NCBI reference database and assigned to “cellular organisms”. The relative percentage of reads assigned to “cellular organisms” of each group of organism is shown. PVC group, superphylam named after three important members Planctomycetes, Verrucomicrobia, and Chlamydiae; FCB group superphylam named after three important members Fibrobacteres, Chlorobi, Bacteroidetes.