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DNA extraction and amplicon production strategies deeply inf luence the outcome of gut mycobiome studies
Frau, Alessandra ; Kenny, John G. ; Lenzi, Luca ; Campbell, Barry J. ; Ijaz, Umer Z. ; Duckworth, Carrie A. ; Burkitt, Michael D. ; Hall, Neil ; Anson, Jim ; Darby, Alistair C. ... show 1 more
Frau, Alessandra
Kenny, John G.
Lenzi, Luca
Campbell, Barry J.
Ijaz, Umer Z.
Duckworth, Carrie A.
Burkitt, Michael D.
Hall, Neil
Anson, Jim
Darby, Alistair C.
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2019-06-27
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Frau, A., Kenny, J.G., Lenzi, L. et al. DNA extraction and amplicon production strategies deeply inf luence the outcome of gut mycobiome studies. Sci Rep 9, 9328 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-44974-x
Abstract
Microbial ecology studies are often performed through extraction of metagenomic DNA followed by
amplifcation and sequencing of a marker. It is known that each step may bias the results. These biases
have been explored for the study of bacterial communities, but rarely for fungi. Our aim was therefore
to evaluate methods for the study of the gut mycobiome. We frst evaluated DNA extraction methods
in fungal cultures relevant to the gut. Afterwards, to assess how these methods would behave with an
actual sample, stool from a donor was spiked with cells from the same cultures. We found that diferent
extraction kits favour some species and bias against others. In terms of amplicon sequencing, we
evaluated fve primer sets, two for ITS2 and one for ITS1, 18S and 28S rRNA. Results showed that 18S
rRNA outperformed the other markers: it was able to amplify all the species in the mock community and
to discriminate among them. ITS primers showed both amplifcation and sequencing biases, the latter
related to the variable length of the product. We identifed several biases in the characterisation of the
gut mycobiome and showed how crucial it is to be aware of these before drawing conclusions from the
results of these studies.
