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Gene-targeted microfluidic cultivation validated by isolation of a gut bacterium listed in Human Microbiome Project's Most Wanted taxa. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper presents a microfluidics-based method for isolating and cultivating specific microorganisms from complex clinical samples.
  • New data suggests there are previously unidentified bacteria with significant biomedical relevance, emphasizing the need for pure cultures to understand microbial genetics better.
  • The method combines strategies like small quantity growth substrates and genetic assays to successfully cultivate a new bacterium from human samples, marking a breakthrough in microbiome research.

Article Abstract

This paper describes a microfluidics-based workflow for genetically targeted isolation and cultivation of microorganisms from complex clinical samples. Data sets from high-throughput sequencing suggest the existence of previously unidentified bacterial taxa and functional genes with high biomedical importance. Obtaining isolates of these targets, preferably in pure cultures, is crucial for advancing understanding of microbial genetics and physiology and enabling physical access to microbes for further applications. However, the majority of microbes have not been cultured, due in part to the difficulties of both identifying proper growth conditions and characterizing and isolating each species. We describe a method that enables genetically targeted cultivation of microorganisms through a combination of microfluidics and on- and off-chip assays. This method involves (i) identification of cultivation conditions for microbes using growth substrates available only in small quantities as well as the correction of sampling bias using a "chip wash" technique; and (ii) performing on-chip genetic assays while also preserving live bacterial cells for subsequent scale-up cultivation of desired microbes, by applying recently developed technology to create arrays of individually addressable replica microbial cultures. We validated this targeted approach by cultivating a bacterium, here referred to as isolate microfluidicus 1, from a human cecal biopsy. Isolate microfluidicus 1 is, to our knowledge, the first successful example of targeted cultivation of a microorganism from the high-priority group of the Human Microbiome Project's "Most Wanted" list, and, to our knowledge, the first cultured representative of a previously unidentified genus of the Ruminococcaceae family.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4103313PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1404753111DOI Listing

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