molecular microbial ecology.?? habitatculturability (%) seawater 0.001-0.1 freshwater 0.25 sediments...

50
Molecular Microbial Ecology

Upload: charlene-hancock

Post on 11-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Molecular Microbial Ecology

Page 2: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

???

???

???

???

Page 3: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

???

???

???

???

Page 4: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Habitat Culturability (%)Seawater 0.001-0.1

Freshwater 0.25Sediments 0.25

Soil 0.3

From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological Reviews

The Challenge for Microbial Ecology

How do you study something you can’t grow in the lab?

Page 5: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 6: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Head et al. 1998

The grand picture, from environment to identification

Page 7: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Head et al. 1998

A more classical approach

Page 8: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)•Everybody has it

•Contains both highly conserved and variable regions

-allows making comparisons between different organisms

over long periods of time (evolutionary history)

•Not laterally transferred between organisms

•Huge and growing database

Page 9: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Universal Tree of Life

BACTERIA

EUKARYA

ARCHAEABACTERIA

EUKARYA

You Are Here

ARCHAEA

Page 10: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Primers can be designed to amplify hypervariable regions, but are specific to Eubacteria vs. Archae

• 16S rRNA Bacteria primer pairs– Several hypervariable regions

• 16S rRNA Archaea primer pairs– Several hypervariable regions

Usual procedure in molecular microbial ecology:

•Obtain environmental sample (soil, seawater, fresh water, organism such as human gut)•Extract total DNA•PCR amplify and obtain “amplicons”

•Or clone DNA, and grow up clones•Genotype/sequence DNA•Characterize microbial diversity

Page 11: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Alternative routes for molecular ecological studies in microbiology

• Get “community fingerprint” via T-RFLP fingerprint profiles

• Get “community fingerprint” via DGGE and sequence bands

• Get species identification by– Clone and sequence clones– Skip cloning, go straight into sequencing (massively

parallel sequencing, MPS)

Page 12: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 13: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 14: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 15: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 16: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 17: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Alternative routes for molecular ecological studies in microbiology

• Get “community fingerprint” via T-RFLP

• Get “community fingerprint” via DGGE and sequence bands

• Get species identification by– Clone and sequence clones– Skip cloning, go straight into sequencing

(massively parallel sequencing, MPS)

Page 18: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 19: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 20: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Denaturing gradient gel electrophosis (DGGE): DNA melts at a certain point

Page 21: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

What do you do with the sequences?

• Perform a similarity search (database)

• Align the sequences (common ancestry)

• Build a tree (phylogeny and taxonomy)

Page 22: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

BLASTBasic Local Alignment Search Tool

http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi

Page 23: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Alignments of sequences

Page 24: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 25: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 26: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Alternative routes for molecular ecological studies in microbiology

• Get “community fingerprint” via T-RFLP

• Get “community fingerprint” via DGGE and sequence bands

• Get species identification by– Clone and sequence clones– Skip cloning, go straight into sequencing

(massively parallel sequencing, MPS)

Page 27: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 28: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

• Built clone libraries from deep-sea rocks

• Compared them to one another and other habitats

Page 29: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Santelli et al. 2008

16S RNA sequences

Page 30: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Community Overlap

Santelli et al. 2008

Page 31: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Alternative routes for molecular ecological studies in microbiology

• Get “community fingerprint” via T-RFLP

• Get “community fingerprint” via DGGE and sequence bands

• Get species identification by– Clone and sequence clones– Skip cloning, go straight into sequencing

(massively parallel sequencing, MPS)

Page 32: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Schematic courtesy of B. Crump

MPS Approaches

Page 33: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

From Hugenholtz and Tyson 2008

The next generation sequencing methods

Platform Million base pairs per run

Cost per base (cents)

Average read length (base pairs)

Dye-terminator (ABI 3730xl)

(classic method)

0.07 0.1 700

454-Roche pyrosequencing (next gen.)

400 0.003 400

Illumina sequencing (next gen.)

2,000 0.0007 35

Page 34: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 35: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

V3, V6 and V6 hypervariable regions in 16S rRNA genes, and taxon specific conserved primer sites

for PCR (%coverage = % species amplified)

Page 36: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

~3,000 archea species

> 36,000 eubacterial

species!

How many species in 1 L of vent fluid?

Page 37: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Now we know who is there:What next?

• Quantify particular groups: FISH or qPCR

Page 38: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Head et al. 1998

Page 39: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Fluorescent In-Situ Hybridization (FISH)

Schleper et al. 2005

Page 40: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

• Detection of “amplification-associated fluorescence” at each cycle during PCR

• No gel-based analysis

• Computer-based analysis

• Compare to internal standards

• Must insure specific binding of probes/dye

Quantitative (Real Time) PCR

Page 41: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Quantitative PCR

Page 42: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 43: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Primers used to amplify mcrA, an important gene for adaptation to

anoxic sediments (note different primers are used to detect different groups)

Page 44: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 45: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological
Page 46: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Now we know who and how many:What next?

• Metagenomics

• RNA-based methods

• Many many more…

Page 47: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Metagenomics a.k.a., Community Genomics, Environmental Genomics

Does not rely on Primers or Probes (apriori knowledge)!

Image courtesy of John Heidelberg

Page 48: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

Access genomes of uncultured microbes:Functional PotentialMetabolic Pathways

Horizontal Gene Transfer…

Metagenomics

Page 49: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

From the Most “Simple” Microbial Communities…

•Acid Mine Drainage (pH ~0!)

•Jillian Banfield (UC Berkeley)

•Well-studied, defined environment with ~4 dominant members

•Were able to reconstruct almost entire community “metagenome”

•Tyson et al. 2004

Page 50: Molecular Microbial Ecology.?? HabitatCulturability (%) Seawater 0.001-0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Sediments 0.25 Soil 0.3 From Amann et al. 1995 Microbiological

… to the potentially most diverse!

•The Sorcerer II Global Ocean Sampling Expedition

•J. Craig Venter Institute “Sequence now, ask questions later”

•Very few genomes reconstructed

•Sequenced 6.3 billion DNA base pairs (Human genome is ~3.2) from top 5 m of ocean

•Discovered more than 6 million genes… and they are only halfway done!

Venter et al. 2004