Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota

Abstract Background Low-biomass microbiome studies (such as those of the lungs, placenta, and skin) are vulnerable to contamination and sequencing stochasticity, which obscure legitimate microbial signal. While human lung microbiome studies have rigorously identified sampling strategies that reliabl...

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Main Authors: Jennifer M. Baker, Kevin J. Hinkle, Roderick A. McDonald, Christopher A. Brown, Nicole R. Falkowski, Gary B. Huffnagle, Robert P. Dickson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:Microbiome
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01055-4
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spelling doaj-fa66e20a7c3643bea5694f1810dcf9c52021-05-09T11:43:48ZengBMCMicrobiome2049-26182021-05-019111410.1186/s40168-021-01055-4Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiotaJennifer M. Baker0Kevin J. Hinkle1Roderick A. McDonald2Christopher A. Brown3Nicole R. Falkowski4Gary B. Huffnagle5Robert P. Dickson6Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical SchoolDivision of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Health SystemDivision of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Health SystemDivision of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Health SystemDivision of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Health SystemDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical SchoolDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical SchoolAbstract Background Low-biomass microbiome studies (such as those of the lungs, placenta, and skin) are vulnerable to contamination and sequencing stochasticity, which obscure legitimate microbial signal. While human lung microbiome studies have rigorously identified sampling strategies that reliably capture microbial signal from these low-biomass microbial communities, the optimal sampling strategy for characterizing murine lung microbiota has not been empirically determined. Performing accurate, reliable characterization of murine lung microbiota and distinguishing true microbial signal from noise in these samples will be critical for further mechanistic microbiome studies in mice. Results Using an analytic approach grounded in microbial ecology, we compared bacterial DNA from the lungs of healthy adult mice collected via two common sampling approaches: homogenized whole lung tissue and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid. We quantified bacterial DNA using droplet digital PCR, characterized bacterial communities using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and systematically assessed the quantity and identity of bacterial DNA in both specimen types. We compared bacteria detected in lung specimens to each other and to potential source communities: negative (background) control specimens and paired oral samples. By all measures, whole lung tissue in mice contained greater bacterial signal and less evidence of contamination than did BAL fluid. Relative to BAL fluid, whole lung tissue exhibited a greater quantity of bacterial DNA, distinct community composition, decreased sample-to-sample variation, and greater biological plausibility when compared to potential source communities. In contrast, bacteria detected in BAL fluid were minimally different from those of procedural, reagent, and sequencing controls. Conclusions An ecology-based analytical approach discriminates signal from noise in this low-biomass microbiome study and identifies whole lung tissue as the preferred specimen type for murine lung microbiome studies. Sequencing, analysis, and reporting of potential source communities, including negative control specimens and contiguous biological sites, are crucial for biological interpretation of low-biomass microbiome studies, independent of specimen type. Video abstracthttps://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01055-4Lung microbiome16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencingBronchoalveolar lavageWhole lung tissue
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer M. Baker
Kevin J. Hinkle
Roderick A. McDonald
Christopher A. Brown
Nicole R. Falkowski
Gary B. Huffnagle
Robert P. Dickson
spellingShingle Jennifer M. Baker
Kevin J. Hinkle
Roderick A. McDonald
Christopher A. Brown
Nicole R. Falkowski
Gary B. Huffnagle
Robert P. Dickson
Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
Microbiome
Lung microbiome
16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing
Bronchoalveolar lavage
Whole lung tissue
author_facet Jennifer M. Baker
Kevin J. Hinkle
Roderick A. McDonald
Christopher A. Brown
Nicole R. Falkowski
Gary B. Huffnagle
Robert P. Dickson
author_sort Jennifer M. Baker
title Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
title_short Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
title_full Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
title_fullStr Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
title_full_unstemmed Whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
title_sort whole lung tissue is the preferred sampling method for amplicon-based characterization of murine lung microbiota
publisher BMC
series Microbiome
issn 2049-2618
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background Low-biomass microbiome studies (such as those of the lungs, placenta, and skin) are vulnerable to contamination and sequencing stochasticity, which obscure legitimate microbial signal. While human lung microbiome studies have rigorously identified sampling strategies that reliably capture microbial signal from these low-biomass microbial communities, the optimal sampling strategy for characterizing murine lung microbiota has not been empirically determined. Performing accurate, reliable characterization of murine lung microbiota and distinguishing true microbial signal from noise in these samples will be critical for further mechanistic microbiome studies in mice. Results Using an analytic approach grounded in microbial ecology, we compared bacterial DNA from the lungs of healthy adult mice collected via two common sampling approaches: homogenized whole lung tissue and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid. We quantified bacterial DNA using droplet digital PCR, characterized bacterial communities using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and systematically assessed the quantity and identity of bacterial DNA in both specimen types. We compared bacteria detected in lung specimens to each other and to potential source communities: negative (background) control specimens and paired oral samples. By all measures, whole lung tissue in mice contained greater bacterial signal and less evidence of contamination than did BAL fluid. Relative to BAL fluid, whole lung tissue exhibited a greater quantity of bacterial DNA, distinct community composition, decreased sample-to-sample variation, and greater biological plausibility when compared to potential source communities. In contrast, bacteria detected in BAL fluid were minimally different from those of procedural, reagent, and sequencing controls. Conclusions An ecology-based analytical approach discriminates signal from noise in this low-biomass microbiome study and identifies whole lung tissue as the preferred specimen type for murine lung microbiome studies. Sequencing, analysis, and reporting of potential source communities, including negative control specimens and contiguous biological sites, are crucial for biological interpretation of low-biomass microbiome studies, independent of specimen type. Video abstract
topic Lung microbiome
16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing
Bronchoalveolar lavage
Whole lung tissue
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01055-4
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