Rectal swabs as a viable alternative to faecal sampling for the analysis of gut microbiota functionality and composition

Author:

Radhakrishnan Shiva T.,Gallagher Kate I.,Mullish Benjamin H.,Serrano-Contreras Jose I.,Alexander James L.,Miguens Blanco Jesus,Danckert Nathan P.,Valdivia-Garcia Maria,Hopkins Billy J.,Ghai Anik,Ayub Azad,Li Jia V.,Marchesi Julian R.,Williams Horace R. T.

Abstract

AbstractFaecal or biopsy samples are frequently used to analyse the gut microbiota, but issues remain with the provision and collection of such samples. Rectal swabs are widely-utilised in clinical practice and previous data demonstrate their potential role in microbiota analyses; however, studies to date have been heterogenous, and there are a particular lack of data concerning the utility of swabs for the analysis of the microbiota’s functionality and metabolome. We compared paired stool and rectal swab samples from healthy individuals to investigate whether rectal swabs are a reliable proxy for faecal sampling. There were no significant differences in key alpha and beta diversity measures between swab and faecal samples, and inter-subject variability was preserved. Additionally, no significant differences were demonstrated in abundance of major annotated phyla. Inferred gut functionality using Tax4Fun2 showed excellent correlation between the two sampling techniques (Pearson’s coefficient r = 0.9217, P < 0.0001). Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy enabled the detection of 20 metabolites, with overall excellent correlation identified between rectal swab and faecal samples for levels all metabolites collectively, although more variable degrees of association between swab and stool for levels of individual metabolites. These data support the utility of rectal swabs in both compositional and functional analyses of the gut microbiota.

Funder

NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre

Medical Research Council

European Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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