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How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has instigated the research on the role of the microbiome in health and disease. The compositional nature of such microbiome datasets makes it however challenging to identify those microbial taxa that are truly associated with an intervention or health outcome. Quant...

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Autores principales: Galazzo, Gianluca, van Best, Niels, Benedikter, Birke J., Janssen, Kevin, Bervoets, Liene, Driessen, Christel, Oomen, Melissa, Lucchesi, Mayk, van Eijck, Pascalle H., Becker, Heike E. F., Hornef, Mathias W., Savelkoul, Paul H., Stassen, Frank R. M., Wolffs, Petra F., Penders, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7426659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32850498
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2020.00403
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author Galazzo, Gianluca
van Best, Niels
Benedikter, Birke J.
Janssen, Kevin
Bervoets, Liene
Driessen, Christel
Oomen, Melissa
Lucchesi, Mayk
van Eijck, Pascalle H.
Becker, Heike E. F.
Hornef, Mathias W.
Savelkoul, Paul H.
Stassen, Frank R. M.
Wolffs, Petra F.
Penders, John
author_facet Galazzo, Gianluca
van Best, Niels
Benedikter, Birke J.
Janssen, Kevin
Bervoets, Liene
Driessen, Christel
Oomen, Melissa
Lucchesi, Mayk
van Eijck, Pascalle H.
Becker, Heike E. F.
Hornef, Mathias W.
Savelkoul, Paul H.
Stassen, Frank R. M.
Wolffs, Petra F.
Penders, John
author_sort Galazzo, Gianluca
collection PubMed
description Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has instigated the research on the role of the microbiome in health and disease. The compositional nature of such microbiome datasets makes it however challenging to identify those microbial taxa that are truly associated with an intervention or health outcome. Quantitative microbiome profiling overcomes the compositional structure of microbiome sequencing data by integrating absolute quantification of microbial abundances into the NGS data. Both cell-based methods (e.g., flow cytometry) and molecular methods (qPCR) have been used to determine the absolute microbial abundances, but to what extent different quantification methods generate similar quantitative microbiome profiles has so far not been explored. Here we compared relative microbiome profiling (without incorporation of microbial quantification) to three variations of quantitative microbiome profiling: (1) microbial cell counting using flow cytometry (QMP), (2) counting of microbial cells using flow cytometry combined with Propidium Monoazide pre-treatment of fecal samples before metagenomics DNA isolation in order to only profile the microbial composition of intact cells (QMP-PMA), and (3) molecular based quantification of the microbial load using qPCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene. Although qPCR and flow cytometry both resulted in accurate and strongly correlated results when quantifying the bacterial abundance of a mock community of bacterial cells, the two methods resulted in highly divergent quantitative microbial profiles when analyzing the microbial composition of fecal samples from 16 healthy volunteers. These differences could not be attributed to the presence of free extracellular prokaryotic DNA in the fecal samples as sample pre-treatment with Propidium Monoazide did not improve the concordance between qPCR-based and flow cytometry-based QMP. Also lack of precision of qPCR was ruled out as a major cause of the disconcordant findings, since quantification of the fecal microbial load by the highly sensitive digital droplet PCR correlated strongly with qPCR. In conclusion, quantitative microbiome profiling is an elegant approach to bypass the compositional nature of microbiome NGS data, however it is important to realize that technical sources of variability may introduce substantial additional bias depending on the quantification method being used.
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spelling pubmed-74266592020-08-25 How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches Galazzo, Gianluca van Best, Niels Benedikter, Birke J. Janssen, Kevin Bervoets, Liene Driessen, Christel Oomen, Melissa Lucchesi, Mayk van Eijck, Pascalle H. Becker, Heike E. F. Hornef, Mathias W. Savelkoul, Paul H. Stassen, Frank R. M. Wolffs, Petra F. Penders, John Front Cell Infect Microbiol Cellular and Infection Microbiology Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has instigated the research on the role of the microbiome in health and disease. The compositional nature of such microbiome datasets makes it however challenging to identify those microbial taxa that are truly associated with an intervention or health outcome. Quantitative microbiome profiling overcomes the compositional structure of microbiome sequencing data by integrating absolute quantification of microbial abundances into the NGS data. Both cell-based methods (e.g., flow cytometry) and molecular methods (qPCR) have been used to determine the absolute microbial abundances, but to what extent different quantification methods generate similar quantitative microbiome profiles has so far not been explored. Here we compared relative microbiome profiling (without incorporation of microbial quantification) to three variations of quantitative microbiome profiling: (1) microbial cell counting using flow cytometry (QMP), (2) counting of microbial cells using flow cytometry combined with Propidium Monoazide pre-treatment of fecal samples before metagenomics DNA isolation in order to only profile the microbial composition of intact cells (QMP-PMA), and (3) molecular based quantification of the microbial load using qPCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene. Although qPCR and flow cytometry both resulted in accurate and strongly correlated results when quantifying the bacterial abundance of a mock community of bacterial cells, the two methods resulted in highly divergent quantitative microbial profiles when analyzing the microbial composition of fecal samples from 16 healthy volunteers. These differences could not be attributed to the presence of free extracellular prokaryotic DNA in the fecal samples as sample pre-treatment with Propidium Monoazide did not improve the concordance between qPCR-based and flow cytometry-based QMP. Also lack of precision of qPCR was ruled out as a major cause of the disconcordant findings, since quantification of the fecal microbial load by the highly sensitive digital droplet PCR correlated strongly with qPCR. In conclusion, quantitative microbiome profiling is an elegant approach to bypass the compositional nature of microbiome NGS data, however it is important to realize that technical sources of variability may introduce substantial additional bias depending on the quantification method being used. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7426659/ /pubmed/32850498 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2020.00403 Text en Copyright © 2020 Galazzo, van Best, Benedikter, Janssen, Bervoets, Driessen, Oomen, Lucchesi, van Eijck, Becker, Hornef, Savelkoul, Stassen, Wolffs and Penders. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Cellular and Infection Microbiology
Galazzo, Gianluca
van Best, Niels
Benedikter, Birke J.
Janssen, Kevin
Bervoets, Liene
Driessen, Christel
Oomen, Melissa
Lucchesi, Mayk
van Eijck, Pascalle H.
Becker, Heike E. F.
Hornef, Mathias W.
Savelkoul, Paul H.
Stassen, Frank R. M.
Wolffs, Petra F.
Penders, John
How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches
title How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches
title_full How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches
title_fullStr How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches
title_full_unstemmed How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches
title_short How to Count Our Microbes? The Effect of Different Quantitative Microbiome Profiling Approaches
title_sort how to count our microbes? the effect of different quantitative microbiome profiling approaches
topic Cellular and Infection Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7426659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32850498
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2020.00403
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