Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.

The importance of planktonic microbial communities is well acknowledged, since they are fundamental for several natural processes of aquatic ecosystems. Microorganisms naturally control the flux of nutrients, and also degrade and recycle anthropogenic organic and inorganic contaminants. Nevertheless...

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Main Authors: Hugo Ribeiro, Alfredo Martins, Marco Gonçalves, Maurício Guedes, Maria Paola Tomasino, Nuno Dias, André Dias, Ana Paula Mucha, Maria F Carvalho, C Marisa R Almeida, Sandra Ramos, José Miguel Almeida, Eduardo Silva, Catarina Magalhães
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216882
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spelling doaj-0b140720a98a4ee592b0140972afeaf82021-03-03T20:40:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01145e021688210.1371/journal.pone.0216882Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.Hugo RibeiroAlfredo MartinsMarco GonçalvesMaurício GuedesMaria Paola TomasinoNuno DiasAndré DiasAna Paula MuchaMaria F CarvalhoC Marisa R AlmeidaSandra RamosJosé Miguel AlmeidaEduardo SilvaCatarina MagalhãesThe importance of planktonic microbial communities is well acknowledged, since they are fundamental for several natural processes of aquatic ecosystems. Microorganisms naturally control the flux of nutrients, and also degrade and recycle anthropogenic organic and inorganic contaminants. Nevertheless, climate change effects and/or the runoff of nutrients/pollutants can affect the equilibrium of natural microbial communities influencing the occurrence of microbial pathogens and/or microbial toxin producers, which can compromise ecosystem environmental status. Therefore, improved microbial plankton monitoring is essential to better understand how these communities respond to environmental shifts. The study of marine microbial communities typically involves highly cost and time-consuming sampling procedures, which can limit the frequency of sampling and data availability. In this context, we developed and validated an in situ autonomous biosampler (IS-ABS) able to collect/concentrate in situ planktonic communities of different size fractions (targeting prokaryotes and unicellular eukaryotes) for posterior genomic, metagenomic, and/or transcriptomic analysis at a home laboratory. The IS-ABS field prototype is a small size and compact system able to operate up to 150 m depth. Water is pumped by a micropump (TCS MG2000) through a hydraulic circuit that allows in situ filtration of environmental water in one or more Sterivex filters placed in a filter cartridge. The IS-ABS also includes an application to program sampling definitions, allowing pre-setting configuration of the sampling. The efficiency of the IS-ABS was tested against traditional laboratory filtration standardized protocols. Results showed a good performance in terms of DNA recovery, as well as prokaryotic (16S rDNA) and eukaryotic (18S rDNA) community diversity analysis, using either methodologies. The IS-ABS automates the process of collecting environmental DNA, and is suitable for integration in water observation systems, what will contribute to substantially increase biological surveillances. Also, the use of highly sensitive genomic approaches allows a further study of the diversity and functions of whole or specific microbial communities.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216882
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hugo Ribeiro
Alfredo Martins
Marco Gonçalves
Maurício Guedes
Maria Paola Tomasino
Nuno Dias
André Dias
Ana Paula Mucha
Maria F Carvalho
C Marisa R Almeida
Sandra Ramos
José Miguel Almeida
Eduardo Silva
Catarina Magalhães
spellingShingle Hugo Ribeiro
Alfredo Martins
Marco Gonçalves
Maurício Guedes
Maria Paola Tomasino
Nuno Dias
André Dias
Ana Paula Mucha
Maria F Carvalho
C Marisa R Almeida
Sandra Ramos
José Miguel Almeida
Eduardo Silva
Catarina Magalhães
Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Hugo Ribeiro
Alfredo Martins
Marco Gonçalves
Maurício Guedes
Maria Paola Tomasino
Nuno Dias
André Dias
Ana Paula Mucha
Maria F Carvalho
C Marisa R Almeida
Sandra Ramos
José Miguel Almeida
Eduardo Silva
Catarina Magalhães
author_sort Hugo Ribeiro
title Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
title_short Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
title_full Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
title_fullStr Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
title_full_unstemmed Development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
title_sort development of an autonomous biosampler to capture in situ aquatic microbiomes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The importance of planktonic microbial communities is well acknowledged, since they are fundamental for several natural processes of aquatic ecosystems. Microorganisms naturally control the flux of nutrients, and also degrade and recycle anthropogenic organic and inorganic contaminants. Nevertheless, climate change effects and/or the runoff of nutrients/pollutants can affect the equilibrium of natural microbial communities influencing the occurrence of microbial pathogens and/or microbial toxin producers, which can compromise ecosystem environmental status. Therefore, improved microbial plankton monitoring is essential to better understand how these communities respond to environmental shifts. The study of marine microbial communities typically involves highly cost and time-consuming sampling procedures, which can limit the frequency of sampling and data availability. In this context, we developed and validated an in situ autonomous biosampler (IS-ABS) able to collect/concentrate in situ planktonic communities of different size fractions (targeting prokaryotes and unicellular eukaryotes) for posterior genomic, metagenomic, and/or transcriptomic analysis at a home laboratory. The IS-ABS field prototype is a small size and compact system able to operate up to 150 m depth. Water is pumped by a micropump (TCS MG2000) through a hydraulic circuit that allows in situ filtration of environmental water in one or more Sterivex filters placed in a filter cartridge. The IS-ABS also includes an application to program sampling definitions, allowing pre-setting configuration of the sampling. The efficiency of the IS-ABS was tested against traditional laboratory filtration standardized protocols. Results showed a good performance in terms of DNA recovery, as well as prokaryotic (16S rDNA) and eukaryotic (18S rDNA) community diversity analysis, using either methodologies. The IS-ABS automates the process of collecting environmental DNA, and is suitable for integration in water observation systems, what will contribute to substantially increase biological surveillances. Also, the use of highly sensitive genomic approaches allows a further study of the diversity and functions of whole or specific microbial communities.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216882
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