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Multi-locus Evaluation of Gastrointestinal Bacterial Communities from Pups in the Gulf of California, México

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Journal PeerJ
Date 2022 Jul 14
PMID 35833012
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Abstract

Background: The gastrointestinal (GI) bacterial communities of sea lions described to date have occasionally revealed large intraspecific variability, which may originate from several factors including different methodological approaches. Indeed, GI bacterial community surveys commonly rely on the use of a single hypervariable region (HR) of , which may result in misleading structural interpretations and limit comparisons among studies. Here, we considered a multi-locus analysis by targeting six HRs of with the aims of (i) comprehensively assessing the GI bacterial consortium in rectal samples from pups and (ii) elucidating structural variations among the tested HRs. In addition, we evaluated which HRs may be most suitable for identifying intrinsic, structurally related microbiome characteristics, such as geographic variations or functional capabilities.

Methods: We employed a Short MUltiple Regions Framework (SMURF) approach using the Ion 16S™ Metagenomic Kit. This kit provides different proprietary primers designed to target six HRs of the gene. To date, the only analytical pipeline available for this kit is the Ion Reporter™ Software of Thermo Fisher Scientific. Therefore, we propose an in-house pipeline to use with open-access tools, such as QIIME2 and PICRUSt 2, in downstream bioinformatic analyses.

Results: As hypothesized, distinctive bacterial community profiles were observed for each analyzed HR. A higher number of bacterial taxa were detected with the V3 and V6-V7 regions. Conversely, the V8 and V9 regions were less informative, as we detected a lower number of taxa. The synergistic information of these HRs suggests that the GI microbiota of pups is predominated by five bacterial phyla: (~50%), (~20%), (~18%), (~7%), and (~4%). Notably, our results differ at times from previously reported abundance profiles, which may promote re-evaluations of the GI bacterial compositions in sea lions and other pinniped species that have been reported to date. Moreover, consistent geographic differences were observed only with the V3, V4, and V6-V7 regions. In addition, these HRs also presented higher numbers of predicted molecular pathways, although no significant functional changes were apparent. Together, our results suggests that multi-locus analysis should be encouraged in GI microbial surveys, as single-locus approaches may result in misleading structural results that hamper the identification of structurally related microbiome features.

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