Literature DB >> 31924621

Metagenomics as a Public Health Risk Assessment Tool in a Study of Natural Creek Sediments Influenced by Agricultural and Livestock Runoff: Potential and Limitations.

Brittany Suttner1, Eric R Johnston1,2, Luis H Orellana1, Luis M Rodriguez-R3, Janet K Hatt1, Diana Carychao4, Michelle Q Carter4, Michael B Cooley4, Konstantinos T Konstantinidis5,3.   

Abstract

Little is known about the public health risks associated with natural creek sediments that are affected by runoff and fecal pollution from agricultural and livestock practices. For instance, the persistence of foodborne pathogens such as Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) originating from these practices remains poorly quantified. Towards closing these knowledge gaps, the water-sediment interface of two creeks in the Salinas River Valley of California was sampled over a 9-month period using metagenomics and traditional culture-based tests for STEC. Our results revealed that these sediment communities are extremely diverse and have functional and taxonomic diversity comparable to that observed in soils. With our sequencing effort (∼4 Gbp per library), we were unable to detect any pathogenic E. coli in the metagenomes of 11 samples that had tested positive using culture-based methods, apparently due to relatively low abundance. Furthermore, there were no significant differences in the abundance of human- or cow-specific gut microbiome sequences in the downstream impacted sites compared to that in upstream more pristine (control) sites, indicating natural dilution of anthropogenic inputs. Notably, the high number of metagenomic reads carrying antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) found in all samples was significantly higher than ARG reads in other available freshwater and soil metagenomes, suggesting that these communities may be natural reservoirs of ARGs. The work presented here should serve as a guide for sampling volumes, amount of sequencing to apply, and what bioinformatics analyses to perform when using metagenomics for public health risk studies of environmental samples such as sediments.IMPORTANCE Current agricultural and livestock practices contribute to fecal contamination in the environment and the spread of food- and waterborne disease and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Traditionally, the level of pollution and risk to public health are assessed by culture-based tests for the intestinal bacterium Escherichia coli However, the accuracy of these traditional methods (e.g., low accuracy in quantification, and false-positive signal when PCR based) and their suitability for sediments remain unclear. We collected sediments for a time series metagenomics study from one of the most highly productive agricultural regions in the United States in order to assess how agricultural runoff affects the native microbial communities and if the presence of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in sediment samples can be detected directly by sequencing. Our study provided important information on the potential for using metagenomics as a tool for assessment of public health risk in natural environments.
Copyright © 2020 American Society for Microbiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antibiotic resistance; metagenomics; microbial ecology; microbial source tracking; sediment microbial communities

Year:  2020        PMID: 31924621      PMCID: PMC7054096          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02525-19

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


  63 in total

1.  IDBA-UD: a de novo assembler for single-cell and metagenomic sequencing data with highly uneven depth.

Authors:  Yu Peng; Henry C M Leung; S M Yiu; Francis Y L Chin
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2012-04-11       Impact factor: 6.937

2.  Greengenes, a chimera-checked 16S rRNA gene database and workbench compatible with ARB.

Authors:  T Z DeSantis; P Hugenholtz; N Larsen; M Rojas; E L Brodie; K Keller; T Huber; D Dalevi; P Hu; G L Andersen
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  Microbial community composition in sediments resists perturbation by nutrient enrichment.

Authors:  Jennifer L Bowen; Bess B Ward; Hilary G Morrison; John E Hobbie; Ivan Valiela; Linda A Deegan; Mitchell L Sogin
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2011-03-17       Impact factor: 10.302

4.  Fast and sensitive protein alignment using DIAMOND.

Authors:  Benjamin Buchfink; Chao Xie; Daniel H Huson
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2014-11-17       Impact factor: 28.547

5.  Elevated nitrate enriches microbial functional genes for potential bioremediation of complexly contaminated sediments.

Authors:  Meiying Xu; Qin Zhang; Chunyu Xia; Yuming Zhong; Guoping Sun; Jun Guo; Tong Yuan; Jizhong Zhou; Zhili He
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2014-03-27       Impact factor: 10.302

6.  An integrated catalog of reference genes in the human gut microbiome.

Authors:  Junhua Li; Huijue Jia; Xianghang Cai; Huanzi Zhong; Qiang Feng; Shinichi Sunagawa; Manimozhiyan Arumugam; Jens Roat Kultima; Edi Prifti; Trine Nielsen; Agnieszka Sierakowska Juncker; Chaysavanh Manichanh; Bing Chen; Wenwei Zhang; Florence Levenez; Juan Wang; Xun Xu; Liang Xiao; Suisha Liang; Dongya Zhang; Zhaoxi Zhang; Weineng Chen; Hailong Zhao; Jumana Yousuf Al-Aama; Sherif Edris; Huanming Yang; Jian Wang; Torben Hansen; Henrik Bjørn Nielsen; Søren Brunak; Karsten Kristiansen; Francisco Guarner; Oluf Pedersen; Joel Doré; S Dusko Ehrlich; Peer Bork; Jun Wang
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2014-07-06       Impact factor: 54.908

7.  QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing data.

Authors:  J Gregory Caporaso; Justin Kuczynski; Jesse Stombaugh; Kyle Bittinger; Frederic D Bushman; Elizabeth K Costello; Noah Fierer; Antonio Gonzalez Peña; Julia K Goodrich; Jeffrey I Gordon; Gavin A Huttley; Scott T Kelley; Dan Knights; Jeremy E Koenig; Ruth E Ley; Catherine A Lozupone; Daniel McDonald; Brian D Muegge; Meg Pirrung; Jens Reeder; Joel R Sevinsky; Peter J Turnbaugh; William A Walters; Jeremy Widmann; Tanya Yatsunenko; Jesse Zaneveld; Rob Knight
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2010-04-11       Impact factor: 28.547

8.  The subsystems approach to genome annotation and its use in the project to annotate 1000 genomes.

Authors:  Ross Overbeek; Tadhg Begley; Ralph M Butler; Jomuna V Choudhuri; Han-Yu Chuang; Matthew Cohoon; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Naryttza Diaz; Terry Disz; Robert Edwards; Michael Fonstein; Ed D Frank; Svetlana Gerdes; Elizabeth M Glass; Alexander Goesmann; Andrew Hanson; Dirk Iwata-Reuyl; Roy Jensen; Neema Jamshidi; Lutz Krause; Michael Kubal; Niels Larsen; Burkhard Linke; Alice C McHardy; Folker Meyer; Heiko Neuweger; Gary Olsen; Robert Olson; Andrei Osterman; Vasiliy Portnoy; Gordon D Pusch; Dmitry A Rodionov; Christian Rückert; Jason Steiner; Rick Stevens; Ines Thiele; Olga Vassieva; Yuzhen Ye; Olga Zagnitko; Veronika Vonstein
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2005-10-07       Impact factor: 16.971

9.  Fecal pollution can explain antibiotic resistance gene abundances in anthropogenically impacted environments.

Authors:  Antti Karkman; Katariina Pärnänen; D G Joakim Larsson
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2019-01-08       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  CD-HIT: accelerated for clustering the next-generation sequencing data.

Authors:  Limin Fu; Beifang Niu; Zhengwei Zhu; Sitao Wu; Weizhong Li
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2012-10-11       Impact factor: 6.937

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  3 in total

1.  Precision long-read metagenomics sequencing for food safety by detection and assembly of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli in irrigation water.

Authors:  Meghan Maguire; Julie A Kase; Dwayne Roberson; Tim Muruvanda; Eric W Brown; Marc Allard; Steven M Musser; Narjol González-Escalona
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-01-14       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Integrated Metagenomic Assessment of Multiple Pre-harvest Control Points on Lettuce Resistomes at Field-Scale.

Authors:  Lauren Wind; Ishi Keenum; Suraj Gupta; Partha Ray; Katharine Knowlton; Monica Ponder; W Cully Hession; Amy Pruden; Leigh-Anne Krometis
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-07-09       Impact factor: 5.640

Review 3.  Antibiotic Resistance in Recreational Waters: State of the Science.

Authors:  Sharon P Nappier; Krista Liguori; Audrey M Ichida; Jill R Stewart; Kaedra R Jones
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-10-31       Impact factor: 3.390

  3 in total

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