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Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research

Microbial sequences inferred as belonging to one sample may not have originated from that sample. Such contamination may arise from laboratory or reagent sources or from physical exchange between samples. This study seeks to rigorously assess the behavior of this often-neglected between-sample conta...

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Autores principales: Minich, Jeremiah J., Sanders, Jon G., Amir, Amnon, Humphrey, Greg, Gilbert, Jack A., Knight, Rob
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6593221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31239396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00186-19
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author Minich, Jeremiah J.
Sanders, Jon G.
Amir, Amnon
Humphrey, Greg
Gilbert, Jack A.
Knight, Rob
author_facet Minich, Jeremiah J.
Sanders, Jon G.
Amir, Amnon
Humphrey, Greg
Gilbert, Jack A.
Knight, Rob
author_sort Minich, Jeremiah J.
collection PubMed
description Microbial sequences inferred as belonging to one sample may not have originated from that sample. Such contamination may arise from laboratory or reagent sources or from physical exchange between samples. This study seeks to rigorously assess the behavior of this often-neglected between-sample contamination. Using unique bacteria, each assigned a particular well in a plate, we assess the frequency at which sequences from each source appear in other wells. We evaluate the effects of different DNA extraction methods performed in two laboratories using a consistent plate layout, including blanks and low-biomass and high-biomass samples. Well-to-well contamination occurred primarily during DNA extraction and, to a lesser extent, in library preparation, while barcode leakage was negligible. Laboratories differed in the levels of contamination. Extraction methods differed in their occurrences and levels of well-to-well contamination, with plate methods having more well-to-well contamination and single-tube methods having higher levels of background contaminants. Well-to-well contamination occurred primarily in neighboring samples, with rare events up to 10 wells apart. This effect was greatest in samples with lower biomass and negatively impacted metrics of alpha and beta diversity. Our work emphasizes that sample contamination is a combination of cross talk from nearby wells and background contaminants. To reduce well-to-well effects, samples should be randomized across plates, samples of similar biomasses should be processed together, and manual single-tube extractions or hybrid plate-based cleanups should be employed. Researchers should avoid simplistic removals of taxa or operational taxonomic units (OTUs) appearing in negative controls, as many will be microbes from other samples rather than reagent contaminants. IMPORTANCE Microbiome research has uncovered magnificent biological and chemical stories across nearly all areas of life science, at times creating controversy when findings reveal fantastic descriptions of microbes living and even thriving in what were once thought to be sterile environments. Scientists have refuted many of these claims because of contamination, which has led to robust requirements, including the use of controls, for validating accurate portrayals of microbial communities. In this study, we describe a previously undocumented form of contamination, well-to-well contamination, and show that this sort of contamination primarily occurs during DNA extraction rather than PCR, is highest with plate-based methods compared to single-tube extraction, and occurs at a higher frequency in low-biomass samples. This finding has profound importance in the field, as many current techniques to “decontaminate” a data set simply rely on an assumption that microbial reads found in blanks are contaminants from “outside,” namely, the reagents or consumables.
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spelling pubmed-65932212019-07-03 Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research Minich, Jeremiah J. Sanders, Jon G. Amir, Amnon Humphrey, Greg Gilbert, Jack A. Knight, Rob mSystems Research Article Microbial sequences inferred as belonging to one sample may not have originated from that sample. Such contamination may arise from laboratory or reagent sources or from physical exchange between samples. This study seeks to rigorously assess the behavior of this often-neglected between-sample contamination. Using unique bacteria, each assigned a particular well in a plate, we assess the frequency at which sequences from each source appear in other wells. We evaluate the effects of different DNA extraction methods performed in two laboratories using a consistent plate layout, including blanks and low-biomass and high-biomass samples. Well-to-well contamination occurred primarily during DNA extraction and, to a lesser extent, in library preparation, while barcode leakage was negligible. Laboratories differed in the levels of contamination. Extraction methods differed in their occurrences and levels of well-to-well contamination, with plate methods having more well-to-well contamination and single-tube methods having higher levels of background contaminants. Well-to-well contamination occurred primarily in neighboring samples, with rare events up to 10 wells apart. This effect was greatest in samples with lower biomass and negatively impacted metrics of alpha and beta diversity. Our work emphasizes that sample contamination is a combination of cross talk from nearby wells and background contaminants. To reduce well-to-well effects, samples should be randomized across plates, samples of similar biomasses should be processed together, and manual single-tube extractions or hybrid plate-based cleanups should be employed. Researchers should avoid simplistic removals of taxa or operational taxonomic units (OTUs) appearing in negative controls, as many will be microbes from other samples rather than reagent contaminants. IMPORTANCE Microbiome research has uncovered magnificent biological and chemical stories across nearly all areas of life science, at times creating controversy when findings reveal fantastic descriptions of microbes living and even thriving in what were once thought to be sterile environments. Scientists have refuted many of these claims because of contamination, which has led to robust requirements, including the use of controls, for validating accurate portrayals of microbial communities. In this study, we describe a previously undocumented form of contamination, well-to-well contamination, and show that this sort of contamination primarily occurs during DNA extraction rather than PCR, is highest with plate-based methods compared to single-tube extraction, and occurs at a higher frequency in low-biomass samples. This finding has profound importance in the field, as many current techniques to “decontaminate” a data set simply rely on an assumption that microbial reads found in blanks are contaminants from “outside,” namely, the reagents or consumables. American Society for Microbiology 2019-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6593221/ /pubmed/31239396 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00186-19 Text en Copyright © 2019 Minich et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Minich, Jeremiah J.
Sanders, Jon G.
Amir, Amnon
Humphrey, Greg
Gilbert, Jack A.
Knight, Rob
Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research
title Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research
title_full Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research
title_fullStr Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research
title_short Quantifying and Understanding Well-to-Well Contamination in Microbiome Research
title_sort quantifying and understanding well-to-well contamination in microbiome research
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6593221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31239396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00186-19
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