Abstract

The common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) is increasingly used as an animal model for biomedical research; however, gastrointestinal diseases causing significant morbidity are endemic in many captive marmoset colonies. Establishing gut microbiome patterns in a marmoset colony may aid in clinical decision-making and model reproducibility. A standardized method of sample collection and storage is essential for proper interpretation of microbiome data. While microbiome studies commonly utilize fecal samples, the goal of this study was to determine whether the microbiome profile from a rectal swab performed on a sedated animal was comparable to the microbiome profile from a fecal sample. During routine physical exams, paired fecal and rectal swab samples were collected from each of 23 marmosets. DNA was extracted from all fecal and rectal swab samples and 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences were amplified and analyzed. Initial comparison of the relative abundance of bacterial phyla between paired samples had a r2 value of 0.70 with S of 0.08 with no significant differences in α and β diversity metrics between fecal and rectal samples. Initial analysis however, revealed 5 discordant fecal-rectal pairs which corresponded only with the 5 rectal swabs that were classified as free of visible fecal matter during collection. Exclusion of these 5 pairs resulted in an optimized fit of the data as evidenced by a r2 value of 0.91 with S of 0.05. These results demonstrate that rectal swabs are a reliable method for profiling the fecal microbiome in the marmoset since the bacterial composition from a rectal swab with visible fecal contents correlated well with the bacterial composition from a fecal sample from the same marmoset. This study highlights the importance of standardized sample collection methods and exclusion of inappropriate samples.

Highlights

  • The common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) is a New World primate that is an attractive nonhuman primate animal model in biomedical research due to its small size, reproductive traits, low zoonotic risk as well as genetic and physiologic similarity to humans

  • Comparing the relative abundance at the phylum level of each fecal-rectal paired demonstrated that the data fit a linear model with a r2 value of 0.91 with S of 0.05 indicating that the relative abundance was in good agreement between the two sample types

  • There were no differences in the diversity metrics between rectal and fecal samples and the weighted UniFrac distance analysis showed significantly lower distances between fecal-rectal pairs of the same animal than residuals plot of the linear regression fit from A

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) is a New World primate that is an attractive nonhuman primate animal model in biomedical research due to its small size, reproductive traits, low zoonotic risk as well as genetic and physiologic similarity to humans. The common marmoset has been used in neuroscience, behavioral, toxicological, reproductive biology, stem cell. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call