Frontiers in Microbiology (Dec 2019)

Exploring the Archaeome: Detection of Archaeal Signatures in the Human Body

  • Manuela R. Pausan,
  • Cintia Csorba,
  • Georg Singer,
  • Holger Till,
  • Veronika Schöpf,
  • Veronika Schöpf,
  • Elisabeth Santigli,
  • Barbara Klug,
  • Christoph Högenauer,
  • Marcus Blohs,
  • Christine Moissl-Eichinger,
  • Christine Moissl-Eichinger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02796
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Due to their fundamentally different biology, archaea are consistently overlooked in conventional microbiome surveys. Using amplicon sequencing, we evaluated methodological set-ups to detect archaea in samples from five different body sites: respiratory tract (nasal cavity), digestive tract (mouth, appendix, and stool) and skin. With optimized protocols, the detection of archaeal ribosomal sequence variants (RSVs) was increased from one (found in currently used, so-called “universal” approach) to 81 RSVs in a representative sample set. The results from this extensive primer-evaluation led to the identification of the primer pair combination 344f-1041R/519F-806R which performed superior for the analysis of the archaeome of gastrointestinal tract, oral cavity and skin. The proposed protocol might not only prove useful for analyzing the human archaeome in more detail but could also be used for other holobiont samples.

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