Variations of gut microbiome profile under different storage conditions and preservation periods: A multi-dimensional evaluation

2019 
Gut dysbiosis contributes to the development of various human diseases. There are thousands of publications per year for investigating the role of gut microbiota in development of various diseases. However, emerging evidence has indicated data inconsistency between different studies frequently, but gained very little attention by scientists. There are many factors that can cause data variation and inconsistency during the process of microbiota study, in particular, sample storage conditions and subsequent sequencing process. Here, we systemically evaluated the impacts of six fecal sample storage conditions (including -80 oC, -80 oC with 70% ethanol (ET_-80 oC), 4 oC with 70% ethanol (ET_4oC), and three commercial storage reagents including OMNIgene·GUT OMR-200 (GT), MGIEasy (MGIE), and Longsee (LS)), storage periods (1, 2 weeks or 6 months), and sequencing platform on gut microbiome profile using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Our results suggested that -80oC is acceptable for fecal sample storage, and the addition of 70% ethanol offers some benefits. Meanwhile, we found that samples in ET_4oC and GT reagents are comparable, both introduced multi-dimensional variations. The use of MGIE resulted in the least alteration, while the greatest changes were observed in samples stored in LS reagents during the whole experiment. Finally, we also confirmed that variations caused by storage condition were larger than that of storage time and sequencing platform.
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