scholarly journals Namco: A microbiome explorer

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Dietrich ◽  
Monica Steffi Matchado ◽  
Maximilian Zwiebel ◽  
Benjamin Ölke ◽  
Michael Lauber ◽  
...  

Background: 16S rRNA gene profiling is currently the most widely used technique in microbiome research and allows for studying microbial diversity, taxonomic profiling, phylogenetics, functional and network analysis. While a plethora of tools have been developed for the analysis of 16S rRNA gene data, only few platforms offer a user-friendly interface and none comprehensively cover the whole analysis pipeline from raw data processing down to complex analysis. Results: We introduce Namco, an R shiny application that offers a streamlined interface and serves as a one-stop solution for microbiome analysis. We demonstrate Namco's capabilities by studying the association between rich fibre diet and the gut microbiota composition. Namco helped to prove the hypothesis that butyrate-producing bacteria are prompted by fibre-enriched intervention. Conclusion: Namco provides a broad range of features from raw data processing and basic statistics down to machine learning and network analysis, thus covering complex data analysis tasks that are not comprehensively covered elsewhere. Namco is freely available at https://exbio.wzw.tum.de/namco/.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgio Gargari ◽  
Giacomo Mantegazza ◽  
Valentina Taverniti ◽  
Cristian Del Bo’ ◽  
Stefano Bernardi ◽  
...  

AbstractThe increased presence of bacteria in blood is a plausible contributing factor in the development and progression of aging-associated diseases. In this context, we performed the quantification and the taxonomic profiling of the bacterial DNA in blood samples collected from forty-three older subjects enrolled in a nursing home. Quantitative PCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene revealed that all samples contained detectable amounts of bacterial DNA with a concentration that varied considerably between subjects. Correlation analyses revealed that the bacterial DNAemia (expressed as concentration of 16S rRNA gene copies in blood) significantly associated with the serum levels of zonulin, a marker of intestinal permeability. This result was confirmed by the analysis of a second set of blood samples collected from the same subjects. 16S rRNA gene profiling revealed that most of the bacterial DNA detected in blood was ascribable to the phylum Proteobacteria with a predominance of the genus Pseudomonas. Several control samples were also analyzed to assess the influence of contaminant bacterial DNA potentially originating from reagents and materials. The data reported here suggest that para-cellular permeability of epithelial (and, potentially, endothelial) cell layers may play an important role in bacterial migration into the bloodstream. Bacterial DNAemia is likely to impact on several aspects of host physiology and could underpin the development and prognosis of various diseases in older subjects.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgio Gargari ◽  
Valentina Taverniti ◽  
Cristian Del Bo’ ◽  
Stefano Bernardi ◽  
Cristina Andres-Lacueva ◽  
...  

AbstractThe increased presence of bacteria in blood is a plausible contributing factor in the development and progression of aging-associated diseases. In this context, we performed the quantification and the taxonomic profiling of the bacterial DNA in blood samples collected from a group of forty-three older subjects enrolled in a nursing home. Quantitative PCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene revealed that all the older volunteers contained detectable amounts of bacterial DNA in their blood. The total amount of 16S rRNA gene copies varied considerably between subjects. Correlation analyses revealed that the bacterial DNAemia (expressed as concentration of 16S rRNA gene copies in blood) significantly correlated with the serum levels of zonulin, an emerging marker of intestinal permeability. This result was confirmed by the analysis of a second set of blood samples collected after approximately four months from the same subjects. Analyses of 16S rRNA gene profiling revealed that most of the bacterial DNA detected in blood was ascribable to the phylum Proteobacteria with a predominance of Pseudomonadaceae and Enterobacteriaceae. Several control samples were also analyzed to assess the influence exerted by contaminant bacterial DNA potentially originating from reagents and materials. The date reported here suggest that para-cellular permeability of epithelial (and potentially also endothelial) cell layers may play an important role in bacterial migration into the bloodstream. Bacterial DNAemia is likely to impact on several aspects of host physiology and could underpin the development and prognosis of various diseases in older subjects.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. e0204600
Author(s):  
Renee M. Petri ◽  
Poulad Pourazad ◽  
Ratchaneewan Khiaosa-ard ◽  
Fenja Klevenhusen ◽  
Barbara U. Metzler-Zebeli ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 1034-1041
Author(s):  
Zubia Rashid ◽  
Syed Muddassar Hussain Gilani ◽  
Asma Ashraf ◽  
Sitwat Zehra ◽  
Abid Azhar ◽  
...  

PLoS ONE ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. e0213869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Tara Peterson ◽  
Vandana Sharma ◽  
Stanislav N. Iablokov ◽  
Levent Albayrak ◽  
Kamil Khanipov ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Clavel ◽  
Sandra Reitmeier ◽  
Thomas CA Hitch ◽  
Nicole Treichel ◽  
Nikolaos Fikas ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing is a very popular approach for studying microbiomes. However, varying standards exist for sample and data processing and some basic concepts, such as the occurrence of spurious sequences, have not been investigated in a comprehensive manner. Methods: Using defined communities of bacteria in vitro and in vivo, we searched for sequences not matching the expected species (i.e., spurious taxa) and determined a minimum threshold of occurrence suitable for robust data analysis. The presence and origin of spurious taxa were investigated via large-scale amplicon queries and gut samples from germfree mice spiked with target mock DNA. We also assessed the effect of varying sequence-filtering stringency on diversity readouts in human fecal and peat soil communities. Our findings are based on data generated in three sequencing facilities and analyzed via both operational taxonomic units (OTUs) and amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) approaches.Results: 16S rRNA gene amplicon data-processing based on OTUs clustering and singleton removal, a commonly used approach that discards any taxa represented by only one sequence across all samples, delivered an average approximately 50% (mock communities) to 80% (gnotobiotic mice) spurious taxa. The fraction of spurious taxa was generally lower based on ASV analysis, but varied depending on the gene region targeted and the barcoding system used. A relative abundance of 0.25% was found as an effective threshold below which the analysis of spurious taxa can be prevented to a large extent in both OTU- and ASV-based analysis approaches. Most spurious taxa (approx. 70%) detected in simplified communities occurred in samples multiplexed in the same sequencing run and were present in only one of ten runs. DNase treatment of gut content from germfree mice partly helped to exclude spurious taxa from the analysis of spiked mock DNA, but was not necessary when applying the 0.25% relative abundance threshold. Using this cut-off improved the reproducibility of analysis, i.e., specifically by reducing variation in richness estimates by 38% compared with singleton filtering in a benchmarking experiment using six human fecal samples across seven sequencing runs. Beta-diversity analyses of human fecal communities was markedly affected by both the filtering strategy and the type of phylogenetic distances used for comparing samples, highlighting the importance of carefully analyzing data before drawing conclusions. Conclusions: Handling of artifact sequences during bioinformatic processing of 16S rRNA gene amplicon data requires careful attention to avoid the generation of misleading findings. Applying a minimum relative abundance threshold between 0.10 and 0.30% is superior to the singleton removal approach, although study-specific analysis strategies may be needed depending on, for instance, the type of samples analyzed and the sequencing depth achieved. Additionally, we propose the concept of effective richness to facilitate the comparison of results across studies.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah E. Epstein ◽  
Alejandra Hernandez-Agreda ◽  
Samuel Starko ◽  
Julia K. Baum ◽  
Rebecca Vega Thurber

16S rRNA gene profiling (amplicon sequencing) is a popular technique for understanding host-associated and environmental microbial communities. Most protocols for sequencing amplicon libraries follow a standardized pipeline that can differ slightly depending on laboratory facility and user. Given that the same variable region of the 16S gene is targeted, it is generally accepted that sequencing output from differing protocols are comparable and this assumption underlies our ability to identify universal patterns in microbial dynamics through meta-analyses. However, discrepant results from a combined 16S rRNA gene dataset prepared by two labs whose protocols differed only in DNA polymerase and sequencing platform led us to scrutinize the outputs and challenge the idea of confidently combining them for standard microbiome analysis. Using technical replicates of reef-building coral samples from two species, Montipora aequituberculata and Porites lobata, we evaluated the consistency of alpha and beta diversity metrics between data resulting from these highly similar protocols. While we found minimal variation in alpha diversity between platform, significant differences were revealed with most beta diversity metrics, dependent on host species. These inconsistencies persisted following removal of low abundance taxa and when comparing across higher taxonomic levels, suggesting that bacterial community differences associated with sequencing protocol are likely to be context dependent and difficult to correct without extensive validation work. The results of this study encourage caution in the statistical comparison and interpretation of studies that combine rRNA gene sequence data from distinct protocols and point to a need for further work identifying mechanistic causes of these observed differences.


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