Evaluation of 16S rRNA gene sequencing for species and strain-level microbiome analysis

Jethro S. Johnson(Jackson Laboratory), Daniel Spakowicz(Jackson Laboratory), Bo‐Young Hong(Jackson Laboratory), Lauren Petersen(Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center), Patrick Demkowicz(Jackson Laboratory), Lei Chen(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Shana R. Leopold(Jackson Laboratory), Blake Hanson(Jackson Laboratory), Hanako Agresta(Jackson Laboratory), Mark Gerstein(Yale University), Erica Sodergren(Jackson Laboratory), George M. Weinstock(Jackson Laboratory)
Nature Communications
November 6, 2019
Cited by 2,230Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The 16S rRNA gene has been a mainstay of sequence-based bacterial analysis for decades. However, high-throughput sequencing of the full gene has only recently become a realistic prospect. Here, we use in silico and sequence-based experiments to critically re-evaluate the potential of the 16S gene to provide taxonomic resolution at species and strain level. We demonstrate that targeting of 16S variable regions with short-read sequencing platforms cannot achieve the taxonomic resolution afforded by sequencing the entire (~1500 bp) gene. We further demonstrate that full-length sequencing platforms are sufficiently accurate to resolve subtle nucleotide substitutions (but not insertions/deletions) that exist between intragenomic copies of the 16S gene. In consequence, we argue that modern analysis approaches must necessarily account for intragenomic variation between 16S gene copies. In particular, we demonstrate that appropriate treatment of full-length 16S intragenomic copy variants has the potential to provide taxonomic resolution of bacterial communities at species and strain level.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis