Their technique leverages portable DNA sequencing technology and sophisticated clustering algorithms to analyse complex bacterial communities in the gut, pulling together their entire genetic code to track the spread of antibiotic resistance and study microbial contributions to human health. The paper was published in Nature Biotechnology on 29 July 2019.
Antibiotic-resistant microorganisms have become a major threat to healthcare systems worldwide, estimated to impact more than 10 million lives annually and cost the global economy more than 100 trillion US dollars by 2050.
The human gut harbours trillions of bacteria that benefit the host in various ways � from breaking down undigested food, to producing essential vitamins and nutrients, and training the immune system. However, gut bacteria can also serve as a "reservoir" for antibiotic-resistant bacteria, allowing for long-term asymptomatic colonisation and transfer of resistance to other bacteria.
Until now, studies have been limited by the resolution of genetic analysis and the ability to understand microbial function in communities harbouring hundreds of bacterial species. The newly-developed method provides a more complete genomic map allowing scientists to study how individual bacterial strains contribute to overall microbial community function in the human body.
In order to develop this method, the research team led by Prof Niranjan Nagarajan and Dr Denis Bertrand from GIS experimented with a range of technologies. They finally narrowed down their search to a portable DNA nanopore sequencer that provides long DNA "reads" and high data throughput.
By assessing 197 stool samples from ongoing clinical studies, they refined and established a protocol that could analyse a majority of the samples and provide high-quality data. By combining this data with accurate short reads, the researchers developed a hybrid assembly algorithm, OPERA-MS, that pieces together billions of DNA sequences into individual strain genomes present in the bacterial community. OPERA-MS combines a sophisticated Bayesian clustering algorithm with combinatorial optimisation to solve the extremely challenging DNA puzzles that �metagenomes� represent.
Benchmarking this new approach against existing methods, researchers found that OPERA-MS provides up to 10 times more complete genomes compared to short reads, and at least 5 times more accurate genomes than when using long reads.
Prof Pavel Pevzner, Ronald R. Taylor Chair and Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at University of California San Diego, said, �Although shotgun metagenomics revolutionized analysis of microbial communities, short-read metagenomic assemblies are typically very fragmented. Nagarajan and colleagues demonstrated that the recently emerged long-read technologies, that have already opened a new era in analyzing isolate genomes, have now opened a new era of 'contiguous assemblies' in metagenomics. I now expect an explosion of long-read metagenomic studies since the contiguity of assemblies is a pre-requisite for many follow-up studies such as antibiotics discovery from metagenomes.�
Dr Denis Bertrand, Staff Scientist at GIS and lead author of this work said, �Hybrid metagenomic assembly with OPERA-MS provides unprecedented resolution at the strain level and near-complete genomes from uncultured samples. We believe this approach can serve as the basis of gold-standard metagenome-assembled genomes for future studies.�
Dr Adam Phillippy, Investigator at the U.S. National Human Genome Research Institute, said, �Recovering high-quality microbial genomes from metagenomic samples is a notoriously hard problem that demands clever solutions. OPERA-MS combines multiple clever solutions, leveraging both short and long-read sequencing, to assemble accurate and continuous genomes out of metagenomes. Such assemblies will be crucial for understanding the function of complex metagenomes.�
Together with clinicians at TTSH, GIS scientists have been applying this new approach to study the colonisation of the gut by multi-antibiotic resistant bacteria. While the presence of thousands of bacterial species and strains in the human gut may make distinguishing "friend from foe" challenging, GIS and TTSH researchers were able to use OPERA-MS to tease apart genomes of commensal gut strains from newly colonising antibiotic resistant strains to characterise their source and function better.
This allowed them to assemble many completely novel resistance gene combinations. The researchers noted that one of the sequences assembled was the closed genome of a 263,000 base long �jumbo� phage that had never been seen before. This discovery could potentially result in new treatment options for antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Prof Niranjan Nagarajan, Associate Director and Senior Group Leader at GIS, noted, �The complete genome sequence of an organism is its ultimate fingerprint. We are excited to now be able to extract it directly out of metagenomic data. We need powerful technological capabilities like this to successfully apply clinical metagenomics in the battle against antibiotic resistance.�
Prof Patrick Tan, Executive Director at GIS, said, �It is exciting to see the power of new nanopore sequencing technologies being brought to bear on this important problem. Real-time clinical metagenomics can transform our understanding of how antibiotic-resistant organisms spread and help us curb this growing menace.�