Abstract

Low microbial biomass in the lungs, high host-DNA contamination and sampling difficulty limit the study on lung microbiome. Therefore, little is still known about lung microbial communities and their functions. Here, we perform a preliminary exploratory study to investigate the composition of swine lung microbial community using shotgun metagenomic sequencing and compare the microbial communities between healthy and severe-lesion lungs. We collected ten lavage-fluid samples from swine lungs (five from healthy lungs and five from severe-lesion lungs), and obtained their metagenomes by shotgun metagenomic sequencing. After filtering host genomic DNA contamination (93.5% ± 1.2%) in the lung metagenomic data, we annotated swine lung microbial communities ranging from four domains to 645 species. Compared with previous taxonomic annotation of the same samples by the 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, it annotated the same number of family taxa but more genera and species. We next performed an association analysis between lung microbiome and host lung-lesion phenotype. We found three species (Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae, Ureaplasma diversum, and Mycoplasma hyorhinis) were associated with lung lesions, suggesting they might be the key species causing swine lung lesions. Furthermore, we successfully reconstructed the metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of these three species using metagenomic binning. This pilot study showed us the feasibility and relevant limitations of shotgun metagenomic sequencing for the characterization of swine lung microbiome using lung lavage-fluid samples. The findings provided an enhanced understanding of the swine lung microbiome and its role in maintaining lung health and/or causing lung lesions.

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