Targeted rRNA depletion enables efficient mRNA sequencing in diverse bacterial species and complex co-cultures

Microbes present one of the most diverse sources of biochemistry in nature, and mRNA sequencing provides a comprehensive view of this biological activity by quantitatively measuring microbial transcriptomes. However, efficient mRNA capture for sequencing presents significant challenges in prokaryote...

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Veröffentlicht in:mSystems 2023-12, Vol.8 (6), p.e0028123-e0028123
Hauptverfasser: Heom, Kellie A, Wangsanuwat, Chatarin, Butkovich, Lazarina V, Tam, Scott C, Rowe, Annette R, O'Malley, Michelle A, Dey, Siddharth S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Microbes present one of the most diverse sources of biochemistry in nature, and mRNA sequencing provides a comprehensive view of this biological activity by quantitatively measuring microbial transcriptomes. However, efficient mRNA capture for sequencing presents significant challenges in prokaryotes as mRNAs are not poly-adenylated and typically make up less than 5% of total RNA compared with rRNAs that exceed 80%. Recently developed methods for sequencing bacterial mRNA typically rely on depleting rRNA by tiling large probe sets against rRNAs; however, such approaches are expensive, time-consuming, and challenging to scale to varied bacterial species and complex microbial communities. Therefore, we developed EMBR-seq+, a method that requires fewer than 10 short oligonucleotides per rRNA to achieve up to 99% rRNA depletion in diverse bacterial species. Finally, EMBR-seq+ resulted in a deeper view of the transcriptome, enabling systematic quantification of how microbial interactions result in altering the transcriptional state of bacteria within co-cultures.
ISSN:2379-5077
2379-5077
DOI:10.1128/msystems.00281-23