Abstract

BackgroundShotgun metagenomics has become an important tool for investigating the ecology of microorganisms. Underlying these investigations is the assumption that metagenome sequence data accurately estimates the census of microbial populations. Multiple displacement amplification (MDA) of microbial community DNA is often used in cases where it is difficult to obtain enough DNA for sequencing; however, MDA can result in amplification biases that may impact subsequent estimates of population census from metagenome data. Some have posited that pooling replicate MDA reactions negates these biases and restores the accuracy of population analyses. This assumption has not been empirically tested.ResultsUsing mock viral communities, we examined the influence of pooling on population-scale analyses. In pooled and single reaction MDA treatments, sequence coverage of viral populations was highly variable and coverage patterns across viral genomes were nearly identical, indicating that initial priming biases were reproducible and that pooling did not alleviate biases. In contrast, control unamplified sequence libraries showed relatively even coverage across phage genomes.ConclusionsMDA should be avoided for metagenomic investigations that require quantitative estimates of microbial taxa and gene functional groups. While MDA is an indispensable technique in applications such as single-cell genomics, amplification biases cannot be overcome by combining replicate MDA reactions. Alternative library preparation techniques should be utilized for quantitative microbial ecology studies utilizing metagenomic sequencing approaches.

Highlights

  • Shotgun metagenomics has become an important tool for investigating the ecology of microorganisms

  • The Pacific Biosciences (PacBio) sequencing technology is sensitive to DNA quality as input DNA is sequenced directly with no prior polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification or cloning steps [20]

  • In a heterogenous mixture of DNA, degraded genomic DNA (gDNA) will have fewer amplification branches during Multiple displacement amplification (MDA) leading to unbalanced amplification of viral community members [21,22,23]

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Summary

Introduction

Shotgun metagenomics has become an important tool for investigating the ecology of microorganisms Underlying these investigations is the assumption that metagenome sequence data accurately estimates the census of microbial populations. Multiple displacement amplification (MDA) of microbial community DNA is often used in cases where it is difficult to obtain enough DNA for sequencing; MDA can result in amplification biases that may impact subsequent estimates of population census from metagenome data. Multiple displacement amplification (MDA) has been one of the most commonly used means of amplifying environmental genomic DNA (gDNA), especially viral gDNA, prior to the construction of DNA fragment sequencing libraries [5]. To our knowledge, the assumption that pooling MDA reactions minimizes representational bias in shotgun metagenome sequence libraries has not been thoroughly tested

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