| Literature DB >> 33782583 |
Naveen Kachroo1, Dirk Lange2, Kristina L Penniston3, Joshua Stern4, Gregory Tasian5, Petar Bajic1, Alan J Wolfe6, Mangesh Suryavanshi7, Andrea Ticinesi8, Tiziana Meschi9, Manoj Monga1,10, Aaron W Miller11,12.
Abstract
Numerous metagenome-wide association studies (MWAS) for urolithiasis have been published, leading to the discovery of potential interactions between the microbiome and urolithiasis. However, questions remain about the reproducibility, applicability and physiological relevance of these data owing to discrepancies in experimental technique and a lack of standardization in the field. One barrier to interpreting MWAS is that experimental biases can be introduced at every step of the experimental pipeline, including sample collection, preservation, storage, processing, sequencing, data analysis and validation. Thus, the introduction of standardized protocols that maintain the flexibility to achieve study-specific objectives is urgently required. To address this need, the first international consortium for microbiome in urinary stone disease - MICROCOSM - was created and consensus panel members were asked to participate in a consensus meeting to develop standardized protocols for microbiome studies if they had published an MWAS on urolithiasis. Study-specific protocols were revised until a consensus was reached. This consensus group generated standardized protocols, which are publicly available via a secure online server, for each step in the typical clinical microbiome-urolithiasis study pipeline. This standardization creates the benchmark for future studies to facilitate consistent interpretation of results and, collectively, to lead to effective interventions to prevent the onset of urolithiasis, and will also be useful for investigators interested in microbiome research in other urological diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33782583 PMCID: PMC8105166 DOI: 10.1038/s41585-021-00450-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Urol ISSN: 1759-4812 Impact factor: 14.432
List of MICROCOSM Consensus Agreement protocols available
| Protocol | Description | Location of full information in Supplementary information or server |
|---|---|---|
| Instructions for MWAS | Details the objectives of the consensus, the protocols available and how to use the server/automated analytical pipeline | Supplementary data pages 1–6 |
| Metadata definitions for 16S and shotgun studies | Details the specific terms and definitions to use for clinical data to be consistent across studies | Supplementary data pages 7–10 Table |
| MICROCOSM questionnaire for patients | A sample questionnaire that can be modified and included as part of an IRB application at the investigator’s home institution | Supplementary data pages 30–50 |
| Mid-stream voided urine sample collection protocol for patients | A protocol that details how patients can self-collect urine samples and ship them to a receiving institution | Supplementary data pages 11–14 |
| Urine collection at time of procedure for physicians | A protocol that details the collection of upper urinary tract urine by physicians | Supplementary data pages 15–16 |
| Urine sample collection form | A sample urine collection form to track urine specimens | Supplementary data page 17 |
| Stool collection protocol for patients | A protocol that details how patients can self-collect stool samples and ship them to a receiving institution | Supplementary data pages 18–21 |
| Stool sample collection form | A sample stool collection form to track urine specimens | Supplementary data page 22 |
| Stone sample collection and processing for physicians | A protocol that details the collection and processing of kidney stone samples by physicians/investigators | Supplementary data pages 23–24 |
| Urine processing for investigators | A protocol that details storage, DNA extraction and sequencing of urine samples | Supplementary data pages 25–26 |
| Stool processing for investigators | A protocol that details storage, DNA extraction and sequencing of stool samples | Supplementary data pages 27–29 |
| 16S mapping file template | Template files with standardized variables for clinical data. The mapping file will be populated with data collected from patients | On server |
| Shotgun metadata template | On server | |
IRB, Institutional Review Board; MWAS, metagenome-wide association study.
Fig. 1Microbiome data analytical workflow.
The flowchart illustrates the analytical steps following data upload for both shotgun and 16S studies, which is automated on upload to the secure analytical server. OTUs, operational taxonomic units.
Culturomic conditions for the isolation of bacteria from either urine and kidney stones[13] or stool[54]
| Media | Temperature | Atmosphere | Pre-incubation | Incubation period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood agar | 37 °C | Aerobic | No | 48 h |
| Blood agar + colistin and nalidixic acid | 37 °C | Anaerobic | No | 48 h |
| CDC anaerobe blood agar | 37 °C | 5% CO2 | No | 48 h |
| Chocolate agar | 37 °C | 5% CO2 | No | 48 h |
| Blood agar | 37 °C | Aerobic | Yes | Up to 30 days |
| Blood agar + rumen fluid | 37 °C | Anaerobic | Yes | Up to 30 days |
| Blood agar + marine broth | 37 °C | Microaerophilic | Yes | Up to 30 days |
| Blood agar + trypticase soy broth | 37 °C | Microaerophilic | Yes | Up to 30 days |