AI Article Synopsis

  • Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) is widely used to estimate microbial populations in environmental samples, but it's often not very accurate due to biases in PCR.
  • Previous research has mainly focused on technical aspects like primer design and reaction conditions, while little attention has been given to how the characteristics of target gene sequences (like their evenness and dominance) impact qPCR results.
  • This study compared three primer sets targeting the dsrB gene and found that the performance of qPCR quantification is affected by the evenness and dominance of gene sequences, suggesting that selecting the right primers and understanding target gene characteristics can improve accuracy and reproducibility in microbial studies.

Article Abstract

Quantitative real-time PCR of phylogenetic and functional marker genes is among the most commonly used techniques to quantify the abundance of microbial taxa in environmental samples. However, in most environmental applications, the approach is a rough assessment of population abundance rather than an exact absolute quantification method because of PCR-based estimation biases caused by multiple factors. Previous studies on these technical issues have focused on primer or template sequence features or PCR reaction conditions. However, how target gene sequence characteristics (e.g., evenness and dominance) in environmental samples affect qPCR quantifications has not been well studied. Here, we compared three primer sets targeting the beta subunit of the dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrB) to investigate qPCR quantification performance under different target gene sequence evenness and dominance conditions using artificial gBlock template mixtures designed accordingly. Our results suggested that the qPCR quantification performance of all tested primer sets was determined by the comprehensive effect of the target gene sequence evenness and dominance in environmental samples. Generally, highly degenerate primer sets have equivalent or better qPCR quantification results than a more target-specific primer set. Low template concentration in this study (~105 copies/L) will exaggerate the qPCR quantification results difference among tested primer sets. Improvements to the accuracy and reproducibility of qPCR assays for gene copy number quantification in environmental microbiology and microbial ecology studies should be based on prior knowledge of target gene sequence information acquired by metagenomic analysis or other approaches, careful selection of primer sets, and proper reaction conditions optimization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10919606PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0299930PLOS

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