Abstract

Barcoded amplicon sequencing is rapidly becoming a standard method for profiling microbial communities, including the human respiratory microbiome. While this approach has less bias than standard cultivation, several steps can introduce variation including the type of DNA extraction method used. Here we assessed five different extraction methods on pediatric bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples and a mock community comprised of nine bacterial genera to determine method reproducibility and detection limits for these typically low complexity communities. Additionally, using the mock community, we were able to evaluate contamination and select a relative abundance cut-off threshold based on the geometric distribution that optimizes the trade off between detecting bona fide operational taxonomic units and filtering out spurious ones. Using this threshold, the majority of genera in the mock community were predictably detected by all extraction methods including the hard-to-lyse Gram-positive genus Staphylococcus. Differences between extraction methods were significantly greater than between technical replicates for both the mock community and BAL samples emphasizing the importance of using a standardized methodology for microbiome studies. However, regardless of method used, individual patients retained unique diagnostic profiles. Furthermore, despite being stored as raw frozen samples for over five years, community profiles from BAL samples were consistent with historical culturing results. The culture-independent profiling of these samples also identified a number of anaerobic genera that are gaining acceptance as being part of the respiratory microbiome. This study should help guide researchers to formulate sampling, extraction and analysis strategies for respiratory and other human microbiome samples.

Highlights

  • Microbial community profiling using the 16 S rRNA gene has experienced a recent resurgence, with the advent of highthroughput amplicon sequencing facilitating large-scale cultureindependent studies of environmental microbiota [1]

  • To provide an objective comparison of DNA extraction methods, we constructed a mock microbial community comprised of taxa many of which are commonly associated with respiratory illness, and in particular, cystic fibrosis (CF) [34]

  • The five DNA extraction methods were tested on three pediatric bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples: two from CF patients and one from a non-CF individual with chronic respiratory disease

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Summary

Introduction

Microbial community profiling using the 16 S rRNA gene has experienced a recent resurgence, with the advent of highthroughput amplicon sequencing facilitating large-scale cultureindependent studies of environmental microbiota [1]. This method has been widely applied to human microbiomes, most notably in the human gut and skin. We sought to evaluate DNA extraction methods for pediatric BAL samples to determine if DNA extraction method has a significant effect on microbial community profiles These methods were tested on a mock community of similar complexity to model detection limits, to identify methodological contaminants, and to compare method reproducibility using a sample of known composition

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