Abstract

Recent progress in environmental microbiology has revealed vast populations of microbes in any given habitat that cannot be detected by conventional culturing strategies. The use of sensitive genetic detection methods such as CARD-FISH and in situ PCR have been limited by the cell wall permeabilization requirement that cannot be performed similarly on all cell types without lysing some and leaving some nonpermeabilized. Furthermore, the detection of low copy targets such as genes present in single copies in the microbial genomes, has remained problematic. We describe an emulsion-based procedure to trap individual microbial cells into picoliter-volume polyacrylamide droplets that provide a rigid support for genetic material and therefore allow complete degradation of cellular material to expose the individual genomes. The polyacrylamide droplets are subsequently converted into picoliter-scale reactors for genome amplification. The amplified genomes are labeled based on the presence of a target gene and differentiated from those that do not contain the gene by flow cytometry. Using the Escherichia coli strains XL1 and MC1061, which differ with respect to the presence (XL1), or absence (MC1061) of a single copy of a tetracycline resistance gene per genome, we demonstrate that XL1 genomes present at 0.1% of MC1061 genomes can be differentiated using this method. Using a spiked sediment microbial sample, we demonstrate that the method is applicable to highly complex environmental microbial communities as a target gene-based screen for individual microbes. The method provides a novel tool for enumerating functional cell populations in complex microbial communities. We envision that the method could be optimized for fluorescence-activated cell sorting to enrich genetic material of interest from complex environmental samples.

Highlights

  • The immense diversity of microbes in the environment is a serious obstacle to determine the presence of different genetic properties of individual microbial cells

  • Methods such as CARD-FISH and in situ-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that allow detection of low copy genetic targets in individual cells are limited by the different properties of bacterial cell surfaces that have to be permeabilized to allow diffusion of reagents into the cells without lysing them (Hodson et al, 1995; Kubota et al, 2008)

  • Multiple displacement amplification (MDA) reaction has recently been developed for unspecific amplification of very low amounts of target DNA (Dean et al, 2002)

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Summary

Introduction

The immense diversity of microbes in the environment is a serious obstacle to determine the presence of different genetic properties of individual microbial cells. Labeled and unlabeled picoreactors are differentiated using flow cytometry, which is capable of distinguishing target populations that constitute as little as 0.1% of the total microbial genome sample. In this proof-ofconcept study, we differentiate two Escherichia coli strains that differ with respect to the presence (E. coli XL1; Keasling et al, 1991) or absence (E. coli MC1061) of a singe copy per genome of a tetracycline resistance gene. The technique could be optimized for fluorescence-activated cell sorting to screen and capture genetic material of interest from complex environmental microbial communities

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