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Quantifying spatiotemporal variability and noise in absolute microbiota abundances using replicate sampling
- Source :
- Nat Methods
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Metagenomic sequencing has enabled detailed investigation of diverse microbial communities, but understanding their spatiotemporal variability remains an important challenge. Here, we present decomposition of variance using replicate sampling (DIVERS), a method based on replicate sampling and spike-in sequencing. The method quantifies the contributions of temporal dynamics, spatial sampling variability, and technical noise to the variances and covariances of absolute bacterial abundances. We applied DIVERS to investigate a high-resolution time series of the human gut microbiome and a spatial survey of a soil bacterial community in Manhattan’s Central Park. Our analysis showed that in the gut, technical noise dominated the abundance variability for nearly half of the detected taxa. DIVERS also revealed substantial spatial heterogeneity of gut microbiota, and high temporal covariances of taxa within the Bacteroidetes phylum. In the soil community, spatial variability primarily contributed to abundance fluctuations at short time scales (weeks), while temporal variability dominated at longer time scales (several months). DIVERS uses replicate sampling and spike-in sequencing to distinguish temporal and spatial variations from noise in microbial samples.
- Subjects :
- Biochemistry
Article
Specimen Handling
03 medical and health sciences
Feces
Spatio-Temporal Analysis
Abundance (ecology)
RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
Humans
Microbiome
Molecular Biology
Soil Microbiology
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
biology
Bacteria
Ecology
Sampling (statistics)
Bacteroidetes
Cell Biology
Replicate
Sequence Analysis, DNA
biology.organism_classification
Spatial heterogeneity
Gastrointestinal Microbiome
Metagenomics
Spatial variability
human activities
Algorithms
Biotechnology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nat Methods
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....394cf83be03ae3a6b6d806f1ae11eae5