MethodsX (Jan 2023)
Development of a robust and quantitative high-throughput screening method for assessing phenotypic variation in large Neisseria meningitidis isolate collections
Abstract
Genome-wide association studies are a powerful approach for identifying determinants of disease. For infectious diseases, high throughput assays are required for measuring the variance in multiple virulence-related phenotypes of large bacterial isolate collections and for association of this phenotypic variance with genotype. The primary limiting factors are cost, effectiveness and a standardized inoculum. A method was developed to create an inoculum array of multiple isolates that could be used for a series of high-throughput multi-isolate phenotypic investigations in a laboratory setting. A key starting point was the standardisation of the inoculum by production of identical batches of each isolate from cells grown to mid-log phase. Cultures with pre-determined optical densities were aliquoted in set patterns into multiple multi-well plates containing 50% glycerol and stored at -80 °C. Prior to a specific assay, an inoculum plate was defrosted and subjected to a brief period of incubation. Control strains can be placed on each plate in order to control for intra-assay variability. A high throughput screen is described in detail for quantification of biofilm formation. This example utilised the crystal violet staining method and multi-assay stock plates containing 16 meningococcal isolates. • Multi-assay stock plate of exponentially growing isolates is cost-effective and simple to implement in a laboratory setting. • This method would predict realistic standard deviations for multiple isolates in phenotypic assays and generate data for performance of power calculations for genotyping. • This method has the potential to identify both known and unknown genetic determinants of phenotypic variability for each tested isolate when paired with genetic analysis of whole genome sequencing data.