| Literature DB >> 33255715 |
Claudia Sala1, Hanne Mordhorst2, Josephine Grützke3, Annika Brinkmann4, Thomas N Petersen2, Casper Poulsen2, Paul D Cotter5, Fiona Crispie5, Richard J Ellis6, Gastone Castellani7, Clara Amid8, Mikhayil Hakhverdyan9, Soizick Le Guyader10, Gerardo Manfreda11, Jöel Mossong12, Andreas Nitsche4, Catherine Ragimbeau12, Julien Schaeffer10, Joergen Schlundt13, Moon Y F Tay13, Frank M Aarestrup2, Rene S Hendriksen2, Sünje Johanna Pamp2, Alessandra De Cesare14.
Abstract
An inter-laboratory proficiency test was organized to assess the ability of participants to perform shotgun metagenomic sequencing of cold smoked salmon, experimentally spiked with a mock community composed of six bacteria, one parasite, one yeast, one DNA, and two RNA viruses. Each participant applied its in-house wet-lab workflow(s) to obtain the metagenomic dataset(s), which were then collected and analyzed using MG-RAST. A total of 27 datasets were analyzed. Sample pre-processing, DNA extraction protocol, library preparation kit, and sequencing platform, influenced the abundance of specific microorganisms of the mock community. Our results highlight that despite differences in wet-lab protocols, the reads corresponding to the mock community members spiked in the cold smoked salmon, were both detected and quantified in terms of relative abundance, in the metagenomic datasets, proving the suitability of shotgun metagenomic sequencing as a genomic tool to detect microorganisms belonging to different domains in the same food matrix. The implementation of standardized wet-lab protocols would highly facilitate the comparability of shotgun metagenomic sequencing dataset across laboratories and sectors. Moreover, there is a need for clearly defining a sequencing reads threshold, to consider pathogens as detected or undetected in a food sample.Entities:
Keywords: experimentally spiked samples; proficiency test; shotgun metagenomics; smoked salmon; wet-lab protocols
Year: 2020 PMID: 33255715 PMCID: PMC7760972 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms8121861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607