Impact of cell lysis treatment before saliva metagenomic DNA extraction on the oral microbiome and the associated resistome
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34793Date
2024-06-28Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Tansirichaiya, Supathep; Songsomboon, Kittikun; Chaianant, Nichamon; Lertsivawinyu, Wasawat; Al-Haroni, Mohammed Hasan HusseinAbstract
Materials and Methods: Saliva samples were collected from five healthy individuals, and each of the samples was subjected to DNA extraction with and without the treatment with MetaPolyzyme. Through metagenomic sequencing, we analyzed, assessed, and compared the microbial composition, resistome, and DNA characteristics between both groups of extracted DNA.
Results: Our study revealed that MetaPolyzyme treatment led to significant shifts in the detectability of microbial composition, favoring Gram‐positive bacteria, notably Streptococcus, over Gram‐negative counterparts. Moreover, the MetaPolyzyme treatment also resulted in a distinct change in ARG distribution. This shift was characterized by an elevated proportion of ARGs linked to fluoroquinolones and efflux pumps, coupled with a reduction in the prevalence of tetracycline and β‐lactam resistance genes when compared with the nontreated group. Alpha diversity analysis demonstrated altered species and ARG distribution without affecting overall diversity, while beta diversity analysis confirmed significant differences in the taxonomical composition and oral resistome between treated and nontreated groups.
Conclusions: These findings underscore the critical role of cell lysis treatment in optimizing oral metagenomic studies and enhance our understanding of the oral resistome's dynamics in the context of antimicrobial resistance.