| Literature DB >> 34823604 |
Kevin Xu Zhong1, Anna Cho2, Christoph M Deeg2, Amy M Chan3, Curtis A Suttle4,5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The microbiome affects the health of plants and animals, including humans, and has many biological, ecological, and evolutionary consequences. Microbiome studies typically rely on sequencing ribosomal 16S RNA gene fragments, which serve as taxonomic markers for prokaryotic communities; however, for eukaryotic microbes this approach is compromised, because 18S rRNA gene sequences from microbial eukaryotes are swamped by contaminating host rRNA gene sequences.Entities:
Keywords: 18S rRNA gene; CCSAS; CRISPR-Cas; CasOligo; Eukaryotic microbiome; Microeukaryote; Taxon-specific single-guide RNA; gRNA target site
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34823604 PMCID: PMC8620255 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01180-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Agilent Bioanalyzer gel images of 18S amplicons from ten model organisms (a and b) and an artificial community of protists and fungi (c) to which Cas9 with the taxon-specific sgRNA (as shown in Table S2) was either added (+) or not (−). Gel bands show the amplicon length in base pairs (bp) relative to a DNA ladder. The labels on the X-axes of panel c indicate the ID of the taxon-specific sgRNAs and its corresponding host to target
Fig. 2Workflow for two-step CRISPR-Cas Selective Amplicon Sequencing (CCSAS) to study the composition of the host-associated eukaryotic microbiome
Fig. 3Panel a shows the relative abundances of eukaryotic groups in eight oyster samples revealed using deep-sequencing of 18S amplicons of rRNA genes. The methods are based on using non-metazoan primers (NM), blocking primers (BP), and CCSAS that combines 18S “universal” primers and cleavage using CRISPR-Cas9. Panel b shows the comparison of the number of 18S rRNA gene OTUs summed for the eight oyster samples for each microeukaryotic group. Panel c shows the Principal Coordinate Analyses (PCoA) of the community structure of the microeukaryotic 18S rRNA gene sequences in oyster spat. The PCoA ordinates the weighted Unifrac matrix that are based on the presence/absence and the relative abundance of microeukaryotic OTUs. Symbol colors represent the oyster samples, and the shapes indicate different methods (CCSAS, NM, BP)
Fig. 4Heatmap (a) showing the relative abundance of 18S rRNA genes in microeukaryotic genera in oyster spat using the three methods. In panel b, linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) reveals differentially detected microeukaryotic genera in oysters among the three methods. The histogram shows LDA scores calculated for differences in genus-level abundances among microeukaryotic 18S rRNA genes for the three methods, and the dot plot shows the p values that determines the LDA significance
Fig. 5Illustration showing the number and taxonomic distribution of gRNA target sites for metazoa and plants that are available for 18S rRNA sequences in the SILVA SSU database v119 [80]. These gRNA-target-site oligonucleotide sequences are used for designing and synthesizing the taxon-specific and the CRISPR-Cas9-compatible sgRNAs that are used to guide CRISPR-Cas9 to cut the 18S rRNA genes of metazoan or plant hosts, but not those of microeukaryotes (protists and fungi). The node size indicates the number of species at each corresponding taxonomic level, while the size of the edge presents the number of gRNA target sites. Nodes and edges with the highest values are purple, while the smallest ones are gray. Only taxa with more than 50 gRNA target sites per taxon are shown