Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont

Reef-building corals comprise multipartite symbioses where the cnidarian animal is host to an array of eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms, and the viruses that infect them. These viruses are critical elements of the coral holobiont, serving not only as agents of mortality, but also as potential ve...

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Main Authors: Karen Dawn Weynberg, Elisha Marie Wood-Charslon, Curtis eSuttle, Madeleine JH van Oppen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00206/full
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spelling doaj-26201a2853f340989f856e96667048d52020-11-24T23:23:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2014-05-01510.3389/fmicb.2014.0020689263Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiontKaren Dawn Weynberg0Elisha Marie Wood-Charslon1Curtis eSuttle2Madeleine JH van Oppen3Australian Institute of Marine ScienceAustralian Institute of Marine ScienceUniversity of British ColombiaAustralian Institute of Marine ScienceReef-building corals comprise multipartite symbioses where the cnidarian animal is host to an array of eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms, and the viruses that infect them. These viruses are critical elements of the coral holobiont, serving not only as agents of mortality, but also as potential vectors for lateral gene flow, and as elements encoding a variety of auxiliary metabolic functions. Consequently, understanding the functioning and health of the coral holobiont requires detailed knowledge of the associated viral assemblage and its function. Currently, the most tractable way of uncovering viral diversity and function is through metagenomic approaches, which is inherently difficult in corals because of the complex holobiont community, an extracellular mucus layer that all corals secrete, and the variety of sizes and structures of nucleic acids found in viruses. Here we present the first protocol for isolating, purifying and amplifying viral nucleic acids from corals based on mechanical disruption of cells. This method produces at least 50% higher yields of viral nucleic acids, has very low levels of cellular sequence contamination and captures wider viral diversity than previously used chemical-based extraction methods. We demonstrate that our mechanical-based method profiles a greater diversity of DNA and RNA genomes, including virus groups such as Retro-transcribing and ssRNA viruses, which are absent from metagenomes generated via chemical-based methods. In addition, we briefly present (and make publically available) the first paired DNA and RNA viral metagenomes from the coral Acropora tenuis.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00206/fullChloroformcoralviral metagenomicsvirus diversityholobiont
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karen Dawn Weynberg
Elisha Marie Wood-Charslon
Curtis eSuttle
Madeleine JH van Oppen
spellingShingle Karen Dawn Weynberg
Elisha Marie Wood-Charslon
Curtis eSuttle
Madeleine JH van Oppen
Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
Frontiers in Microbiology
Chloroform
coral
viral metagenomics
virus diversity
holobiont
author_facet Karen Dawn Weynberg
Elisha Marie Wood-Charslon
Curtis eSuttle
Madeleine JH van Oppen
author_sort Karen Dawn Weynberg
title Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
title_short Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
title_full Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
title_fullStr Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
title_full_unstemmed Generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
title_sort generating viral metagenomes from the coral holobiont
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2014-05-01
description Reef-building corals comprise multipartite symbioses where the cnidarian animal is host to an array of eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms, and the viruses that infect them. These viruses are critical elements of the coral holobiont, serving not only as agents of mortality, but also as potential vectors for lateral gene flow, and as elements encoding a variety of auxiliary metabolic functions. Consequently, understanding the functioning and health of the coral holobiont requires detailed knowledge of the associated viral assemblage and its function. Currently, the most tractable way of uncovering viral diversity and function is through metagenomic approaches, which is inherently difficult in corals because of the complex holobiont community, an extracellular mucus layer that all corals secrete, and the variety of sizes and structures of nucleic acids found in viruses. Here we present the first protocol for isolating, purifying and amplifying viral nucleic acids from corals based on mechanical disruption of cells. This method produces at least 50% higher yields of viral nucleic acids, has very low levels of cellular sequence contamination and captures wider viral diversity than previously used chemical-based extraction methods. We demonstrate that our mechanical-based method profiles a greater diversity of DNA and RNA genomes, including virus groups such as Retro-transcribing and ssRNA viruses, which are absent from metagenomes generated via chemical-based methods. In addition, we briefly present (and make publically available) the first paired DNA and RNA viral metagenomes from the coral Acropora tenuis.
topic Chloroform
coral
viral metagenomics
virus diversity
holobiont
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00206/full
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AT elishamariewoodcharslon generatingviralmetagenomesfromthecoralholobiont
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