Abstract

BackgroundInfants born prematurely, particularly extremely low birth weight infants (ELBW) have altered gut microbial communities. Factors such as maternal health, gut immaturity, delivery mode, and antibiotic treatments are associated with microbiota disturbances, and are linked to an increased risk of certain diseases such as necrotising enterocolitis. Therefore, there is a requirement to optimally characterise microbial profiles in this at-risk cohort, via standardisation of methods, particularly for studying the influence of microbiota therapies (e.g. probiotic supplementation) on community profiles and health outcomes. Profiling of faecal samples using the 16S rRNA gene is a cost-efficient method for large-scale clinical studies to gain insights into the gut microbiota and additionally allows characterisation of cohorts were sample quantities are compromised (e.g. ELBW infants). However, DNA extraction method, and the 16S rRNA region targeted can significantly change bacterial community profiles obtained, and so confound comparisons between studies. Thus, we sought to optimise a 16S rRNA profiling protocol to allow standardisation for studying ELBW infant faecal samples, with or without probiotic supplementation.MethodsUsing ELBW faecal samples, we compared three different DNA extraction methods, and subsequently PCR amplified and sequenced three hypervariable regions of the 16S rRNA gene (V1 + V2 + V3), (V4 + V5) and (V6 + V7 + V8), and compared two bioinformatics approaches to analyse results (OTU and paired end). Paired shotgun metagenomics was used as a ‘gold-standard’.ResultsResults indicated a longer bead-beating step was required for optimal bacterial DNA extraction and that sequencing regions (V1 + V2 + V3) and (V6 + V7 + V8) provided the most representative taxonomic profiles, which was confirmed via shotgun analysis. Samples sequenced using the (V4 + V5) region were found to be underrepresented in specific taxa including Bifidobacterium, and had altered diversity profiles. Both bioinformatics 16S rRNA pipelines used in this study (OTU and paired end) presented similar taxonomic profiles at genus level.ConclusionsWe determined that DNA extraction from ELBW faecal samples, particularly those infants receiving probiotic supplementation, should include a prolonged beat-beating step. Furthermore, use of the 16S rRNA (V1 + V2 + V3) and (V6 + V7 + V8) regions provides reliable representation of ELBW microbiota profiles, while inclusion of the (V4 + V5) region may not be appropriate for studies where Bifidobacterium constitutes a resident microbiota member.

Highlights

  • IntroductionExtremely low birth weight infants (ELBW) have altered gut microbial communities

  • Infants born prematurely, extremely low birth weight infants (ELBW) have altered gut microbial communities

  • Each library was prepared using a specific pair of primers which target different hypervariable regions of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene: primers 27F-519R target (V1 + V2 + V3), primers 530F-926R target (V4 + V5), and primers 926F-1394R target (V6 + V7 + V8). c A preliminary bioinformatics analysis was performed on two samples using two different bioinformatics pipelines: operational taxonomic unit (OTU) analysis and the paired end protocol (PE) protocol

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Summary

Introduction

Extremely low birth weight infants (ELBW) have altered gut microbial communities. Factors such as maternal health, gut immaturity, delivery mode, and antibiotic treatments are associated with microbiota disturbances, and are linked to an increased risk of certain diseases such as necrotising enterocolitis. Extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants (born with a birth weight < 1000 g) have an underdeveloped gut (e.g. including altered pH), and immune system (e.g. reduced expression of microbial pattern recognition receptors) [2] They are often exposed to external factors that can adversely impact early life gut microbiota colonisation such as Caesarean (C-) section delivery, and frequent antibiotic treatments [3]. ELBW infants have distinct gut microbial communities compared to their full-term counterparts [7], which may directly predispose them to gut bacterial disturbances, and life threatening diseases such as necrotising enterocolitis (NEC) and sepsis [8]

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