AI Article Synopsis

  • Cell storage and DNA isolation are crucial for expanding biotechnology applications using non-model microbes, particularly anaerobic gut fungi, which have specific challenges like rigid cell walls and anaerobic lifestyles.
  • The study outlines effective, user-friendly methods to preserve these gut fungi long-term at -80 °C using glycerol, maintaining sample viability for over 23 months without the need for specialized equipment.
  • An optimized DNA extraction technique is presented that produces high-quality genomic DNA suitable for next-gen sequencing, avoiding issues like contamination from the fungi's complex cell wall and energy reserves, which are common with traditional methods.

Article Abstract

Cell storage and DNA isolation are essential to developing an expanded suite of microorganisms for biotechnology. However, many features of non-model microbes, such as an anaerobic lifestyle and rigid cell wall, present formidable challenges to creating strain repositories and extracting high quality genomic DNA. Here, we establish accessible, high efficiency, and robust techniques to store lignocellulolytic anaerobic gut fungi long term without specialized equipment. Using glycerol as a cryoprotectant, gut fungal isolates were preserved for a minimum of 23 months at -80 °C. Unlike previously reported approaches, this improved protocol is non-toxic and rapid, with samples surviving twice as long with negligible growth impact. Genomic DNA extraction for these isolates was optimized to yield samples compatible with next generation sequencing platforms (e.g. Illumina, PacBio). Popular DNA isolation kits and precipitation protocols yielded preps that were unsuitable for sequencing due to carbohydrate contaminants from the chitin-rich cell wall and extensive energy reserves of gut fungi. To address this, we identified a proprietary method optimized for hardy plant samples that rapidly yielded DNA fragments in excess of 10 kb with minimal RNA, protein or carbohydrate contamination. Collectively, these techniques serve as fundamental tools to manipulate powerful biomass-degrading gut fungi and improve their accessibility among researchers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anaerobe.2015.11.008DOI Listing

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