Literature DB >> 34042466

One-Cell Metabolic Phenotyping and Sequencing of Soil Microbiome by Raman-Activated Gravity-Driven Encapsulation (RAGE).

Xiaoyan Jing1,2,3, Yanhai Gong1,2,3, Teng Xu1,2,3, Yu Meng1,2,3, Xiao Han1,2,3, Xiaolu Su1,2,3, Jianmei Wang1,2,3, Yuetong Ji1,4,3, Yuandong Li1,2,3, Zhongjun Jia5,3, Bo Ma1,2,3, Jian Xu1,2,3.   

Abstract

Soil harbors arguably the most metabolically and genetically heterogeneous microbiomes on Earth, yet establishing the link between metabolic functions and genome at the precisely one-cell level has been difficult. Here, for mock microbial communities and then for soil microbiota, we established a Raman-activated gravity-driven single-cell encapsulation and sequencing (RAGE-Seq) platform, which identifies, sorts, and sequences precisely one bacterial cell via its anabolic (incorporating D from heavy water) and physiological (carotenoid-containing) functions. We showed that (i) metabolically active cells from numerically rare soil taxa, such as Corynebacterium spp., Clostridium spp., Moraxella spp., Pantoea spp., and Pseudomonas spp., can be readily identified and sorted based on D2O uptake, and their one-cell genome coverage can reach ∼93% to allow high-quality genome-wide metabolic reconstruction; (ii) similarly, carotenoid-containing cells such as Pantoea spp., Legionella spp., Massilia spp., Pseudomonas spp., and Pedobacter spp. were identified and one-cell genomes were generated for tracing the carotenoid-synthetic pathways; and (iii) carotenoid-producing cells can be either metabolically active or inert, suggesting culture-based approaches can miss many such cells. As a Raman-activated cell sorter (RACS) family member that can establish a metabolism-genome link at exactly one-cell resolution from soil, RAGE-Seq can help to precisely pinpoint "who is doing what" in complex ecosystems. IMPORTANCE Soil is home to an enormous and complex microbiome that features arguably the highest genomic diversity and metabolic heterogeneity of cells on Earth. Their in situ metabolic activities drive many natural processes of pivotal ecological significance or underlie industrial production of numerous valuable bioactivities. However, pinpointing "who is doing what" in a soil microbiome, which consists of mainly yet-to-be-cultured species, has remained a major challenge. Here, for soil microbiota, we established a Raman-activated gravity-driven single-cell encapsulation and sequencing (RAGE-Seq) method, which identifies, sorts, and sequences at the resolution of precisely one microbial cell via its catabolic and anabolic functions. As a Raman-activated cell sorter (RACS) family member that can establish a metabolism-genome link at one-cell resolution from soil, RAGE-Seq can help to precisely pinpoint "who is doing what" in complex ecosystems.

Entities:  

Keywords:  D2O; Raman-activated gravity-driven single-cell encapsulation and sequencing (RAGE-Seq); carotenoids; single-cell genomics; soil microbiome

Year:  2021        PMID: 34042466     DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00181-21

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  mSystems        ISSN: 2379-5077            Impact factor:   6.496


  3 in total

1.  Species-Resolved Metagenomics of Kindergarten Microbiomes Reveal Microbial Admixture Within Sites and Potential Microbial Hazards.

Authors:  TzeHau Lam; Dillon Chew; Helen Zhao; Pengfei Zhu; Lili Zhang; Yajie Dai; Jiquan Liu; Jian Xu
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 5.640

2.  Single-cell Raman spectroscopy identifies Escherichia coli persisters and reveals their enhanced metabolic activities.

Authors:  Chuan Wang; Rongze Chen; Jian Xu; Lijian Jin
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 6.064

3.  Microbial Single-Cell Analysis: What Can We Learn From Mammalian?

Authors:  Zixi Chen; Beixin Mo; Anping Lei; Jiangxin Wang
Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2022-01-17
  3 in total

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