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Assessment of In Vitro and In Silico Protocols for Sequence-Based Characterization of the Human Vaginal Microbiome.

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TLDR
Different tools for the removal of host reads and the taxonomic annotation of metagenomic reads are assessed, including a new, easy-to-build and -use reference database of vaginal taxa, which performed as well as the best-performing previously published strategies.
Abstract
The vaginal microbiome has been connected to a wide range of health outcomes. This has led to a thriving research environment but also to the use of conflicting methodologies to study its microbial composition. Here, we systematically assessed best practices for the sequencing-based characterization of the human vaginal microbiome. As far as 16S rRNA gene sequencing is concerned, the V1-V3 region performed best in silico, but limitations of current sequencing technologies meant that the V3-V4 region performed equally well. Both approaches presented very good agreement with qPCR quantification of key taxa, provided that an appropriate bioinformatic pipeline was used. Shotgun metagenomic sequencing presents an interesting alternative to 16S rRNA gene amplification and sequencing but requires deeper sequencing and more bioinformatic expertise and infrastructure. We assessed different tools for the removal of host reads and the taxonomic annotation of metagenomic reads, including a new, easy-to-build and -use reference database of vaginal taxa. This curated database performed as well as the best-performing previously published strategies. Despite the many advantages of shotgun sequencing, none of the shotgun approaches assessed here agreed with the qPCR data as well as the 16S rRNA gene sequencing.IMPORTANCE The vaginal microbiome has been connected to various aspects of host health, including susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections as well as gynecological cancers and pregnancy outcomes. This has led to a thriving research environment but also to conflicting available methodologies, including many studies that do not report their molecular biological and bioinformatic methods in sufficient detail to be considered reproducible. This can lead to conflicting messages and delay progress from descriptive to intervention studies. By systematically assessing best practices for the characterization of the human vaginal microbiome, this study will enable past studies to be assessed more critically and assist future studies in the selection of appropriate methods for their specific research questions.

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OUP accepted manuscript

- 11 May 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the effect of hormonal fluctuations on other body site's microbiomes as well as the interplay between them, finding that the use of hormonal contraception did not significantly associate with the microbiome composition in the vagina, faeces, rectum or saliva in healthy young women.
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A comparison of approaches to scaffolding multiple regions along the 16S rRNA gene for improved resolution

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OUP accepted manuscript

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Cohort profile: the Swedish Maternal Microbiome project (SweMaMi) – assessing the dynamic associations between the microbiome and maternal and neonatal adverse events

TL;DR: The role of the microbiome on maternal and neonatal outcomes and early-childhood diseases will be explored and the role and interaction of other risk factors and confounders are explored.
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Effect of proton pump inhibitors in infants with esophageal atresia on the gut microbiome: a pilot cohort

TL;DR: In this paper , the effects of proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) on the infant microbiome remain unclear, and the authors present a Swedish pilot cohort study to assess the longitudinal effect of long-term PPI on infant gut microbiome.
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