A ribosomal operon database and MegaBLAST settings for strain-level resolution of microbiomes
Author(s) -
Lee J. Kerkhof,
Pierce A. Roth,
Samir V. Deshpande,
Robert C. Bernhards,
Alvin T. Liem,
Jessica M. Hill,
Max M. Häggblom,
Nicole S. Webster,
Olufunmilola Ibironke,
Seda Mirzoyan,
James Polashock,
Raymond F. Sullivan
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
fems microbes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2633-6685
DOI - 10.1093/femsmc/xtac002
Subject(s) - minion , ribosomal rna , operon , biology , 16s ribosomal rna , genetics , 23s ribosomal rna , phylogenetic tree , computational biology , contig , strain (injury) , nanopore sequencing , gene , dna sequencing , rna , genome , escherichia coli , ribosome , anatomy
Current methods to characterize microbial communities generally employ sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene (<500 bp) with high accuracy (∼99%) but limited phylogenetic resolution. However, long-read sequencing now allows for the profiling of near-full-length ribosomal operons (16S-ITS-23S rRNA genes) on platforms such as the Oxford Nanopore MinION. Here, we describe an rRNA operon database with >300 ,000 entries, representing >10 ,000 prokaryotic species and ∼ 150, 000 strains. Additionally, BLAST parameters were identified for strain-level resolution using in silico mutated, mock rRNA operon sequences (70–95% identity) from four bacterial phyla and two members of the Euryarchaeota, mimicking MinION reads. MegaBLAST settings were determined that required <3 s per read on a Mac Mini with strain-level resolution for sequences with >84% identity. These settings were tested on rRNA operon libraries from the human respiratory tract, farm/forest soils and marine sponges ( n = 1, 322, 818 reads for all sample sets). Most rRNA operon reads in this data set yielded best BLAST hits (95 ± 8%). However, only 38–82% of library reads were compatible with strain-level resolution, reflecting the dominance of human/biomedical-associated prokaryotic entries in the database. Since the MinION and the Mac Mini are both portable, this study demonstrates the possibility of rapid strain-level microbiome analysis in the field.
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