47
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Preservation Methods Differ in Fecal Microbiome Stability, Affecting Suitability for Field Studies

      research-article

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Our study, spanning 15 individuals and over 1,200 samples, provides our most comprehensive view to date of storage and stabilization effects on stool. We tested five methods for preserving human and dog fecal specimens for periods of up to 8 weeks, including the types of variation often encountered under field conditions, such as freeze-thaw cycles and high temperature fluctuations. We show that several cost-effective methods provide excellent microbiome stability out to 8 weeks, opening up a range of field studies with humans and wildlife that would otherwise be cost-prohibitive.

          ABSTRACT

          Immediate freezing at −20°C or below has been considered the gold standard for microbiome preservation, yet this approach is not feasible for many field studies, ranging from anthropology to wildlife conservation. Here we tested five methods for preserving human and dog fecal specimens for periods of up to 8 weeks, including such types of variation as freeze-thaw cycles and the high temperature fluctuations often encountered under field conditions. We found that three of the methods—95% ethanol, FTA cards, and the OMNIgene Gut kit—can preserve samples sufficiently well at ambient temperatures such that differences at 8 weeks are comparable to differences among technical replicates. However, even the worst methods, including those with no fixative, were able to reveal microbiome differences between species at 8 weeks and between individuals after a week, allowing meta-analyses of samples collected using various methods when the effect of interest is expected to be larger than interindividual variation (although use of a single method within a study is strongly recommended to reduce batch effects). Encouragingly for FTA cards, the differences caused by this method are systematic and can be detrended. As in other studies, we strongly caution against the use of 70% ethanol. The results, spanning 15 individuals and over 1,200 samples, provide our most comprehensive view to date of storage effects on stool and provide a paradigm for the future studies of other sample types that will be required to provide a global view of microbial diversity and its interaction among humans, animals, and the environment.

          IMPORTANCE Our study, spanning 15 individuals and over 1,200 samples, provides our most comprehensive view to date of storage and stabilization effects on stool. We tested five methods for preserving human and dog fecal specimens for periods of up to 8 weeks, including the types of variation often encountered under field conditions, such as freeze-thaw cycles and high temperature fluctuations. We show that several cost-effective methods provide excellent microbiome stability out to 8 weeks, opening up a range of field studies with humans and wildlife that would otherwise be cost-prohibitive.

          Related collections

          Most cited references21

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: not found
          • Article: not found

          QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing data.

            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: found
            Is Open Access

            Structure, Function and Diversity of the Healthy Human Microbiome

            Studies of the human microbiome have revealed that even healthy individuals differ remarkably in the microbes that occupy habitats such as the gut, skin, and vagina. Much of this diversity remains unexplained, although diet, environment, host genetics, and early microbial exposure have all been implicated. Accordingly, to characterize the ecology of human-associated microbial communities, the Human Microbiome Project has analyzed the largest cohort and set of distinct, clinically relevant body habitats to date. We found the diversity and abundance of each habitat’s signature microbes to vary widely even among healthy subjects, with strong niche specialization both within and among individuals. The project encountered an estimated 81–99% of the genera, enzyme families, and community configurations occupied by the healthy Western microbiome. Metagenomic carriage of metabolic pathways was stable among individuals despite variation in community structure, and ethnic/racial background proved to be one of the strongest associations of both pathways and microbes with clinical metadata. These results thus delineate the range of structural and functional configurations normal in the microbial communities of a healthy population, enabling future characterization of the epidemiology, ecology, and translational applications of the human microbiome.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              UniFrac: a new phylogenetic method for comparing microbial communities.

              We introduce here a new method for computing differences between microbial communities based on phylogenetic information. This method, UniFrac, measures the phylogenetic distance between sets of taxa in a phylogenetic tree as the fraction of the branch length of the tree that leads to descendants from either one environment or the other, but not both. UniFrac can be used to determine whether communities are significantly different, to compare many communities simultaneously using clustering and ordination techniques, and to measure the relative contributions of different factors, such as chemistry and geography, to similarities between samples. We demonstrate the utility of UniFrac by applying it to published 16S rRNA gene libraries from cultured isolates and environmental clones of bacteria in marine sediment, water, and ice. Our results reveal that (i) cultured isolates from ice, water, and sediment resemble each other and environmental clone sequences from sea ice, but not environmental clone sequences from sediment and water; (ii) the geographical location does not correlate strongly with bacterial community differences in ice and sediment from the Arctic and Antarctic; and (iii) bacterial communities differ between terrestrially impacted seawater (whether polar or temperate) and warm oligotrophic seawater, whereas those in individual seawater samples are not more similar to each other than to those in sediment or ice samples. These results illustrate that UniFrac provides a new way of characterizing microbial communities, using the wealth of environmental rRNA sequences, and allows quantitative insight into the factors that underlie the distribution of lineages among environments.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                mSystems
                mSystems
                msys
                msys
                mSystems
                mSystems
                American Society for Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
                2379-5077
                3 May 2016
                May-Jun 2016
                : 1
                : 3
                : e00021-16
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Pediatrics, University of California—San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA
                [b ]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado—Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, USA
                [c ]Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA
                [d ]Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California—San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA
                University of Utah
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Rob Knight, robknight@ 123456ucsd.edu .

                Citation Song SJ, Amir A, Metcalf JL, Amato KR, Xu ZZ, Humphrey G, Knight R. 2016. Preservation methods differ in fecal microbiome stability, affecting suitability for field studies. mSystems 1(3):e00021-16. doi: 10.1128/mSystems.00021-16.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0750-5709
                Article
                mSystems00021-16
                10.1128/mSystems.00021-16
                5069758
                27822526
                e1eca753-39d1-490d-8eed-b0c07c19db2e
                Copyright © 2016 Song et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

                History
                : 1 March 2016
                : 5 April 2016
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 22, Pages: 12, Words: 7043
                Funding
                Funded by: W.M. Keck Foundation http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000888
                Award Recipient : Rob Knight
                Funded by: John Templeton Foundation http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000925
                Award ID: 44000
                Award Recipient : Se Jin Song Award Recipient : Jessica L Metcalf Award Recipient : Rob Knight
                Funded by: U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000074
                Award ID: 2014-R2-CX-K011
                Award Recipient : Se Jin Song Award Recipient : Jessica L Metcalf Award Recipient : Rob Knight
                Categories
                Research Article
                Applied and Environmental Science
                Custom metadata
                May/June 2016

                dna stability,fecal microbiome,sample storage
                dna stability, fecal microbiome, sample storage

                Comments

                Comment on this article