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Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool

BACKGROUND: Different bacteria in stool have markedly varied growth and survival when stored at ambient temperature. It is paramount to develop optimal biostabilization of stool samples during collection and assess long-term storage for clinical specimens and epidemiological microbiome studies. We e...

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Autores principales: Flores, Roberto, Shi, Jianxin, Yu, Guoqin, Ma, Bing, Ravel, Jacques, Goedert, James J., Sinha, Rashmi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4534027/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26269741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40168-015-0092-7
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author Flores, Roberto
Shi, Jianxin
Yu, Guoqin
Ma, Bing
Ravel, Jacques
Goedert, James J.
Sinha, Rashmi
author_facet Flores, Roberto
Shi, Jianxin
Yu, Guoqin
Ma, Bing
Ravel, Jacques
Goedert, James J.
Sinha, Rashmi
author_sort Flores, Roberto
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Different bacteria in stool have markedly varied growth and survival when stored at ambient temperature. It is paramount to develop optimal biostabilization of stool samples during collection and assess long-term storage for clinical specimens and epidemiological microbiome studies. We evaluated the effect of collection media and delayed freezing up to 7 days on microbial composition. Ten participants collected triplicate stool samples each into no media as well as RNAlater® with and without kanamycin or ciprofloxacin. For each set of conditions, triplicate samples were frozen on dry ice immediately (time = 0) or frozen at −80 °C after 3-days and 7-days incubation at 25 °C. Microbiota metrics were estimated from Illumina MiSeq sequences of 16S rRNA gene fragments (V3–V4 region). Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) across triplicates, collection media, and incubation time were estimated for taxonomy and alpha and beta diversity metrics. RESULTS: RNAlater® alone yielded the highest ICCs for diversity metrics at time = 0 [ICC median 0.935 (range 0.89–0.97)], but ICCs varied greatly (range 0.44–1.0) for taxa with relative abundances <1 %. The 3- and 7-day freezing delays were generally associated with stable beta diversity for all three media conditions. Freezing delay caused increased variance for Shannon index (median ICC 0.77) and especially for observed species abundance (median ICC 0.47). Variance in observed species abundance and in phylogenetic distance whole tree was similarly increased with a 7-day delay. Antibiotics did not mitigate variance. No media had inferior ICCs at time 0 and differed markedly from any media in microbiome composition (e.g., P = 0.01 for relative abundance of Bacteroidetes). CONCLUSION: Bacterial community composition was stable for 7 days at room temperature in RNAlater® alone. RNAlater® provides some stability for beta diversity analyses, but analyses of rare taxa will be inaccurate if specimens are not frozen immediately. RNAlater® could be used as collection media with minimal change in the microbiota composition.
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spelling pubmed-45340272015-08-13 Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool Flores, Roberto Shi, Jianxin Yu, Guoqin Ma, Bing Ravel, Jacques Goedert, James J. Sinha, Rashmi Microbiome Methodology BACKGROUND: Different bacteria in stool have markedly varied growth and survival when stored at ambient temperature. It is paramount to develop optimal biostabilization of stool samples during collection and assess long-term storage for clinical specimens and epidemiological microbiome studies. We evaluated the effect of collection media and delayed freezing up to 7 days on microbial composition. Ten participants collected triplicate stool samples each into no media as well as RNAlater® with and without kanamycin or ciprofloxacin. For each set of conditions, triplicate samples were frozen on dry ice immediately (time = 0) or frozen at −80 °C after 3-days and 7-days incubation at 25 °C. Microbiota metrics were estimated from Illumina MiSeq sequences of 16S rRNA gene fragments (V3–V4 region). Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) across triplicates, collection media, and incubation time were estimated for taxonomy and alpha and beta diversity metrics. RESULTS: RNAlater® alone yielded the highest ICCs for diversity metrics at time = 0 [ICC median 0.935 (range 0.89–0.97)], but ICCs varied greatly (range 0.44–1.0) for taxa with relative abundances <1 %. The 3- and 7-day freezing delays were generally associated with stable beta diversity for all three media conditions. Freezing delay caused increased variance for Shannon index (median ICC 0.77) and especially for observed species abundance (median ICC 0.47). Variance in observed species abundance and in phylogenetic distance whole tree was similarly increased with a 7-day delay. Antibiotics did not mitigate variance. No media had inferior ICCs at time 0 and differed markedly from any media in microbiome composition (e.g., P = 0.01 for relative abundance of Bacteroidetes). CONCLUSION: Bacterial community composition was stable for 7 days at room temperature in RNAlater® alone. RNAlater® provides some stability for beta diversity analyses, but analyses of rare taxa will be inaccurate if specimens are not frozen immediately. RNAlater® could be used as collection media with minimal change in the microbiota composition. BioMed Central 2015-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4534027/ /pubmed/26269741 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40168-015-0092-7 Text en © Flores et al. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Methodology
Flores, Roberto
Shi, Jianxin
Yu, Guoqin
Ma, Bing
Ravel, Jacques
Goedert, James J.
Sinha, Rashmi
Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
title Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
title_full Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
title_fullStr Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
title_full_unstemmed Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
title_short Collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
title_sort collection media and delayed freezing effects on microbial composition of human stool
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4534027/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26269741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40168-015-0092-7
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