Oral Sciences Research Group, Department of Surgery and Medical-Surgical Specialties, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Health Research Institute Foundation of Santiago (FIDIS), Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
Centro Singular de Investigación en Tecnoloxías Intelixentes and Departamento de Electrónica e Computación, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Health Research Institute Foundation of Santiago (FIDIS), Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2022 Feb 9;11:770668. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.770668. eCollection 2021.
Although clustering by operational taxonomic units (OTUs) is widely used in the oral microbial literature, no research has specifically evaluated the extent of the limitations of this sequence clustering-based method in the oral microbiome. Consequently, our objectives were to: 1) evaluate the coverage of a set of previously selected primer pairs to detect oral species having 16S rRNA sequence segments with ≥97% similarity; 2) describe oral species with highly similar sequence segments and determine whether they belong to distinct genera or other higher taxonomic ranks. Thirty-nine primer pairs were employed to obtain the amplicons from the complete genomes of 186 bacterial and 135 archaeal species. Each fasta file for the same primer pair was inserted as subject and query in BLASTN for obtaining the similarity percentage between amplicons belonging to different oral species. Amplicons with 100% alignment coverage of the query sequences and with an amplicon similarity value ≥97% (ASI97) were selected. For each primer, the species coverage with no ASI97 (SC-NASI97) was calculated. Based on the SC-NASI97 parameter, the best primer pairs were OP_F053-KP_R020 for bacteria (region V1-V3; primer pair position for J01859.1: 9-356); KP_F018-KP_R002 for archaea (V4; undefined-532); and OP_F114-KP_R031 for both (V3-V5; 340-801). Around 80% of the oral-bacteria and oral-archaea species analyzed had an ASI97 with at least one other species. These very similar species play different roles in the oral microbiota and belong to bacterial genera such as , , and , and archaeal genera such as , and . Moreover, ~20% and ~30% of these two-by-two similarity relationships were established between species from different bacterial and archaeal genera, respectively. Even taxa from distinct families, orders, and classes could be grouped in the same possible OTU. Consequently, regardless of the primer pair used, sequence clustering with a 97% similarity provides an inaccurate description of oral-bacterial and oral-archaeal species, which can greatly affect microbial diversity parameters. As a result, OTU clustering conditions the credibility of associations between some oral species and certain health and disease conditions. This significantly limits the comparability of the microbial diversity findings reported in oral microbiome literature.
虽然基于操作分类单元 (OTU) 的聚类在口腔微生物文献中被广泛应用,但尚无研究专门评估这种基于序列聚类的方法在口腔微生物组中的局限性程度。因此,我们的目标是:1) 评估一组先前选定的引物对检测具有 16S rRNA 序列片段相似度≥97%的口腔物种的覆盖范围;2) 描述具有高度相似序列片段的口腔物种,并确定它们是否属于不同的属或其他更高的分类等级。使用 39 对引物从 186 种细菌和 135 种古菌的全基因组中获得扩增子。对于每个引物,将相同引物对的每个 fasta 文件作为主题和查询插入 BLASTN 中,以获得属于不同口腔物种的扩增子之间的相似百分比。选择具有查询序列 100%对齐覆盖度且扩增子相似度值≥97%(ASI97)的扩增子。对于每个引物,计算没有 ASI97 的物种覆盖率(SC-NASI97)。基于 SC-NASI97 参数,选择最佳引物对为细菌的 OP_F053-KP_R020(区域 V1-V3;J01859.1 引物对位置:9-356);古菌的 KP_F018-KP_R002(V4;未定义-532);以及两者的 OP_F114-KP_R031(V3-V5;340-801)。分析的约 80%的口腔细菌和口腔古菌物种与至少一种其他物种具有 ASI97。这些非常相似的物种在口腔微生物群中发挥不同的作用,属于细菌属,如 、 、 和 ,以及古菌属,如 、 和 。此外,这两个相似物种之间约 20%和~30%的关系分别建立在来自不同细菌和古菌属的物种之间。即使来自不同科、目和类的分类群也可以归为同一可能的 OTU。因此,无论使用哪种引物对,相似度为 97%的序列聚类都不能准确描述口腔细菌和口腔古菌物种,这会极大地影响微生物多样性参数。因此,OTU 聚类条件会影响某些口腔物种与某些健康和疾病状况之间的关联的可信度。这极大地限制了口腔微生物组文献中报道的微生物多样性研究结果的可比性。