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Challenges and insights in the exploration of the low abundance human ocular surface microbiome

Elio L. Herzog, Marco Kreuzer, Martin S. Zinkernagel, Denise C. Zysset‐Burri

2023Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose: The low microbial abundance on the ocular surface results in challenges in the characterization of its microbiome. The purpose of this study was to reveal factors introducing bias in the pipeline from sample collection to data analysis of low-abundant microbiomes. Methods: Lower conjunctiva and lower lid swabs were collected from six participants using either standard cotton or flocked nylon swabs. Microbial DNA was isolated with two different kits (with or without prior host DNA depletion and mechanical lysis), followed by whole-metagenome shotgun sequencing with a high sequencing depth set at 60 million reads per sample. The relative microbial compositions were generated using the two different tools MetaPhlan3 and Kraken2. Results: . Depending on the DNA extraction kit and tool used for profiling, the microbial composition and the relative abundance of viruses varied. Conclusion: The microbial composition on the ocular surface is not dependent on the swab type, but on the DNA extraction method and profiling tool. These factors have to be considered in further studies about the ocular surface microbiome and other sparsely colonized microbiomes in order to improve data reproducibility. Understanding challenges and biases in the characterization of the ocular surface microbiome may set the basis for microbiome-altering interventions for treatment of ocular surface associated diseases.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeMetagenomicsFirmicutesBiologyProteobacteriaActinobacteriaDNA extractionShotgun sequencingHuman microbiomeMicrobiologyDNA sequencingDNABioinformaticsGeneticsBacteria16S ribosomal RNAPolymerase chain reactionGeneOcular Infections and TreatmentsOcular Surface and Contact LensCorneal Surgery and Treatments