Abstract

BackgroundNew technologies like next-generation sequencing have led to a proliferation of studies investigating the role of the gut microbiome in human health, particularly population-based studies that rely upon participant self-collection of samples. However, the impact of methodological differences in sample shipping, storage, and processing are not well-characterized for these types of studies, especially when transit times may exceed 24 h. The aim of this study was to experimentally assess microbiota stability in stool samples stored at 4 °C for durations of 6, 24, 48, 72, and 96 h with no additives to better understand effects of variable shipping times in population-based studies. These data were compared to a baseline sample that was immediately stored at − 80 °C after stool production.ResultsCompared to the baseline sample, we found that the alpha-diversity metrics Shannon’s and Inverse Simpson’s had excellent intra-class correlations (ICC) for all storage durations. Chao1 richness had good to excellent ICC. We found that the relative abundances of bacteria in the phyla Verrucomicrobia, Actinobacteria, and Proteobacteria had excellent ICC with baseline for all storage durations, while Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes ranged from moderate to good. We interpreted the ICCs as follows: poor: ICC < 0.50, moderate: 0.50 < ICC < 0.75, good: 0.75 < ICC < 0.90, and excellent: ICC > 0.90. Using the Bray–Curtis dissimilarity index, we found that the greatest change in community composition occurred between 0 and 24 h of storage, while community composition remained relatively stable for subsequent storage durations. Samples showed strong clustering by individual, indicating that inter-individual variability was greater than the variability associated with storage time.ConclusionsThe results of this analysis suggest that several measures of alpha diversity, relative abundance, and overall community composition are robust to storage at 4 °C for up to 96 h. We found that the overall community richness was influenced by storage duration in addition to the relative abundances of sequences within the Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes phyla. Finally, we demonstrate that inter-individual variability in microbiota composition was greater than the variability due to changing storage durations.

Highlights

  • New technologies like next-generation sequencing have led to a proliferation of studies investigating the role of the gut microbiome in human health, population-based studies that rely upon participant selfcollection of samples

  • To estimate the effect of storage time on microbiome richness and diversity, we compared several alpha-diversity metrics and the relative abundances of the five major phyla against a baseline sample, which was frozen at − 80 ̊C within 30 min of production

  • We show that the greatest impact of storage time in changes to gut microbial composition occur within 24 h after sample collection, after which storage time up to 96 h does not change analytic results using standard diversity metrics

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Summary

Introduction

New technologies like next-generation sequencing have led to a proliferation of studies investigating the role of the gut microbiome in human health, population-based studies that rely upon participant selfcollection of samples. The aim of this study was to experimentally assess microbiota stability in stool samples stored at 4 °C for durations of 6, 24, 48, 72, and 96 h with no additives to better understand effects of variable shipping times in population-based studies. Holzhausen et al Gut Pathogens (2021) 13:75 the role of the gut microbiome in human health, including population-based studies that rely on participant self-collection of stool samples. These population-based studies can take place across a wide geographic region, necessitating the shipment of stool to a central location for processing. To improve comparability and repeatability between large, population-based studies, better characterization of the effects of varying shipping times is needed

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