U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

SRX19124234: GSM6947246: Fs+Ar Control Rep3; Fibrobacter succinogenes; Anaeromyces robustus; OTHER
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina HiSeq 4000) run: 15.2M spots, 4.6G bases, 2Gb downloads

External Id: GSM6947246_r1
Submitted by: Chemical Engineering, University of California Santa Barbara
Study: Bacterial mRNA sequencing through targeted rRNA depletion for efficient RNA-seq in varied species and co-cultures
show Abstracthide Abstract
mRNA sequencing in bacteria is challenging due to the abundance of ribosomal rRNA that cannot be easily removed prior to sequencing. While commercially available kits target specific rRNA sequences found in defined lists of common bacterial species, they are frequently inefficient when applied to other divergent species, including those from environmental isolates. Similar to the commercial kits, other common techniques for rRNA depletion typically employ large probe sets that tile full-length rRNA sequences; however, such approaches are both time consuming and expensive when applied to multiple species or complex consortia of non-model microbes. To overcome these limitations, we present EMBR-seq+, which employs less than twenty target oligonucleotides per rRNA molecule, and builds upon our previous rRNA depletion approach, EMBR-seq, through the addition of an RNase H depletion step, to achieve rRNA removal efficiencies of up to 99%. First, we applied EMBR-seq+ to monocultures of Escherichia coli, Geobacter metallireducens, and Fibrobacter succinogenes strain UWB7 to deplete rRNA to approximately 1-7% of the sequencing reads, demonstrating that the new method can be easily extended to diverse bacterial species. Further, in more complex co-cultures between F. succinogenes strain UWB7 and anerobic fungal species, we applied EMBR-seq+ to deplete both bacterial and fungal rRNA, with an approximately 4-fold improved bacterial rRNA depletion efficiency compared to a previous report using a commercial kit, thereby showing that the method can be effectively translated to non-model microbial mixtures. Notably, we also demonstrate that for microbial species with poorly annotated genomes and unknown rRNA sequences, the RNase H depletion component of EMBR-seq+ enables rapid iterations in probe design without requiring to start experiments from total RNA each time, and was key for depleting fungal rRNA to enrich the bacterial mRNA readout in co-cultures. Finally, efficient depletion of rRNA enabled systematic quantification of the reprogramming of the bacterial transcriptome when cultured in the presence of the anerobic fungi, Anaeromyces robustus and Caecomyces churrovis. We observed that F. succinogenes strain UWB7 transcribes nearly 200 carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZyme) genes in both monoculture and co-culture conditions, with several lignocellulose-degrading CAZymes downregulated in the presence of an anerobic gut fungus. This finding is consistent with the premise that bacteria and fungi specialize in different aspects of biomass breakdown, such that the presence of one regulates the CAZyme production of the other. This also supports previous findings that the fungi release excess reducing sugars in the supernatant, which benefits other members of the microbial community. Thus EMBR-seq+ provides a new and detailed perspective of a rumen microbiome model system by dramatically improving the efficiency of mRNA sequencing, and more generally also enables high-throughput, cost-effective and rapid quantification of the transcriptome to gain functional insights into less-studied and non-model microbial systems. Overall design: We developed a method, EMBR-seq+, to efficiently sequence RNA from bacterial samples by depleting rRNA during the RNA library preparation. EMBR-seq+ combines our previous method, EMBR-seq, with RNase H treatment to achieve improved rRNA depletion. We demonstrated that rRNA is depleted to less than 10% of sequencing reads for monocultures of E. coli, G. metallireducens, and F. succinogenes strain UWB7 and less than 25% of bacterial reads for co-cultures of F. succinogenes strain UWB7 with either A. robustus or C. churrovis.
Sample: Fs+Ar Control Rep3
SAMN32819524 • SRS16523508 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Name: GSM6947246
Instrument: Illumina HiSeq 4000
Strategy: OTHER
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: other
Layout: PAIRED
Construction protocol: For E. coli and G. metallireducens monocultures, total RNA extractions were performed using Trizol according to the manufacturer's protocol. RNA was extracted from F. succinogenes strain UWB7 monoculture & co-culture pellets using the RNeasy Mini Kit following the protocol for purification of total RNA from plant cells and tissues and filamentous fungi, using liquid N2 method of cell lysis, QIAshredder homogenization, on-column DNase I digestion, and elution in 30 µL of RNAse-free water. (1) Overview: EMBR-seq libraries were prepared according to the protocol described in Wangsanuwat et al. 100 ng of total RNA were used as input material for all libraries. For the libraries denoted “EMBR-seq” and “EMBR-seq+”
Runs: 1 run, 15.2M spots, 4.6G bases, 2Gb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR2317377315,231,4034.6G2Gb2023-09-30

ID:
26296712

Supplemental Content

Search details

See more...

Recent activity