When is a microbial culture "pure"? Persistent cryptic contaminant escapes detection even with deep genome sequencing.

TitleWhen is a microbial culture "pure"? Persistent cryptic contaminant escapes detection even with deep genome sequencing.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsShrestha PMalla, Nevin KP, Shrestha M, Lovley DR
JournalmBio
Volume4
Issue2
Paginatione00591-12
Date Published2013 Mar 12
ISSN2150-7511
KeywordsCoinfection, Electrodes, Genes, Bacterial, Genotype, Geobacter, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Microbial Interactions, Polymerase Chain Reaction
Abstract

UNLABELLED: Geobacter sulfurreducens strain KN400 was recovered in previous studies in which a culture of the DL1 strain of G. sulfurreducens served as the inoculum in investigations of microbial current production at low anode potentials (-400 mV versus Ag/AgCl). Differences in the genome sequences of KN400 and DL1 were too great to have arisen from adaptive evolution during growth on the anode. Previous deep sequencing (80-fold coverage) of the DL1 culture failed to detect sequences specific to KN400, suggesting that KN400 was an external contaminant inadvertently introduced into the anode culturing system. In order to evaluate this further, a portion of the gene for OmcS, a c-type cytochrome that both KN400 and DL1 possess, was amplified from the DL1 culture. HiSeq-2000 Illumina sequencing of the PCR product detected the KN400 sequence, which differs from the DL1 sequence at 14 bp, at a frequency of ca. 1 in 10(5) copies of the DL1 sequence. A similar low frequency of KN400 was detected with quantitative PCR of a KN400-specific gene. KN400 persisted at this frequency after intensive restreaking of isolated colonies from the DL1 culture. However, a culture in which KN400 could no longer be detected was obtained by serial dilution to extinction in liquid medium. The KN400-free culture could not grow on an anode poised at -400 mV. Thus, KN400 cryptically persisted in the culture dominated by DL1 for more than a decade, undetected by even deep whole-genome sequencing, and was only fortuitously uncovered by the unnatural selection pressure of growth on a low-potential electrode.

IMPORTANCE: Repeated streaking of isolated colonies on solidified medium remains a common strategy for obtaining pure cultures, especially of difficult-to-cultivate microorganisms such as strict anaerobes. The results presented here demonstrate that verifying the purity of cultures obtained in this manner may be difficult because extremely rare variants can persist, undetectable with even deep genomic DNA sequencing. The only way to ensure that a culture is pure is to cultivate it from an initial single cell, which may be technically difficult for many environmentally significant microbes.

DOI10.1128/mBio.00591-12
Alternate JournalmBio
PubMed ID23481604
PubMed Central IDPMC3604776