A targeted approach to enrich host-associated bacteria for metagenomic sequencing

Author:

Dungan Ashley M1ORCID,Tandon Kshitij1ORCID,Jameson Vanta2,Gotze Cecilie Ravn13,Blackall Linda L1,van Oppen Madeleine J H13

Affiliation:

1. School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne , Melbourne, VIC 3010 , Australia

2. Melbourne Cytometry Platform, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Melbourne , Melbourne, VIC 3010 , Australia

3. Reef Recovery, Restoration and Adaptation Program, Australian Institute of Marine Science , Townsville, QLD 4810 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Multicellular eukaryotic organisms are hosts to communities of bacteria that reside on or inside their tissues. Often the eukaryotic members of the system contribute to high proportions of metagenomic sequencing reads, making it challenging to achieve sufficient sequencing depth to evaluate bacterial ecology. Stony corals are one such complex community; however, separation of bacterial from eukaryotic (primarily coral and algal symbiont) cells has so far not been successful. Using a combination of hybridization chain reaction fluorescence in situ hybridization and fluorescence activated cell sorting (HCR-FISH + FACS), we sorted two populations of bacteria from five genotypes of the coral Acropora loripes, targeting (i) Endozoicomonas spp, and (ii) all other bacteria. NovaSeq sequencing resulted in 67–91 M reads per sample, 55%–90% of which were identified as bacterial. Most reads were taxonomically assigned to the key coral-associated family, Endozoicomonadaceae, with Vibrionaceae also abundant. Endozoicomonadaceae were 5x more abundant in the ‘Endozoicomonas’ population, highlighting the success of the dual-labelling approach. This method effectively enriched coral samples for bacteria with <1% contamination from host and algal symbionts. The application of this method will allow researchers to decipher the functional potential of coral-associated bacteria. This method can also be adapted to accommodate other host-associated communities.

Funder

Australian Research Council

University of Melbourne

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science

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