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Rapid ordering of barcoded transposon insertion libraries of anaerobic bacteria

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TLDR
In this article, a protocol was developed to assemble ordered libraries of transposon insertion mutants that is fast, cheap and effective for even strict anaerobes by making use of cell sorting to order the library and barcoded transposons to facilitate the localization of ordered mutations.
Abstract
Commensal bacteria from the human intestinal microbiota play important roles in health and disease. Research into the mechanisms by which these bacteria exert their effects is hampered by the complexity of the microbiota, the strict growth requirements of the individual species and a lack of genetic tools and resources. The assembly of ordered transposon insertion libraries, in which nearly all nonessential genes have been disrupted and the strains stored as independent monocultures, would be a transformative resource for research into many microbiota members. However, assembly of these libraries must be fast and inexpensive in order to empower investigation of the large number of species that typically compose gut communities. The methods used to generate ordered libraries must also be adapted to the anaerobic growth requirements of most intestinal bacteria. We have developed a protocol to assemble ordered libraries of transposon insertion mutants that is fast, cheap and effective for even strict anaerobes. The protocol differs from currently available methods by making use of cell sorting to order the library and barcoded transposons to facilitate the localization of ordered mutations in the library. By tracking transposon insertions using barcode sequencing, our approach increases the accuracy and reduces the time and effort required to locate mutants in the library. Ordered libraries can be sorted and characterized over the course of 2 weeks using this approach. We expect this protocol will lower the barrier to generating comprehensive, ordered mutant libraries for many species in the human microbiota, allowing for new investigations into genotype–phenotype relationships within this important microbial ecosystem. This protocol assembles ordered libraries of transposon insertion mutants, even for strict anaerobes. It uses cell sorting to order the library and tracks transposon insertions using barcode sequencing to locate individual mutant strains in the ordered library.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying rapid bacterial evolution and transmission within the mouse intestine.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduced hundreds of barcoded Escherichia coli strains into germ-free mice and quantified strain-level dynamics and metagenomic changes, highlighting the interplay between environmental transmission and rapid, deterministic selection during evolution of the intestinal microbiota.
Journal ArticleDOI

CRISPRi-seq for genome-wide fitness quantification in bacteria

TL;DR: A protocol to assess genome-wide gene fitness in a single sequencing step (CRISPRi-seq) is described and the use of the protocol is demonstrated in Streptococcus pneumoniae, an important human pathogen; however, the protocol can be adapted for use in other organisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Profiling the human intestinal environment under physiological conditions

TL;DR: In this article , the authors developed an ingestible device that collects samples from multiple regions of the human intestinal tract during normal digestion, and subsequent multi-omics analyses identified significant differences between bacteria, phages, host proteins and metabolites in the intestines versus stool.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic identification of molecular mediators of interspecies sensing in a community of two frequently coinfecting bacterial pathogens

Tiffany M. Zarrella, +1 more
- 01 Jun 2022 - 
TL;DR: A systematic strategy based on transcriptomics combined with genetic and biochemical screens of promoter-reporters to identify the molecules from one species that are sensed by another, yielding new insight into the molecular basis of interactions between these two species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An ordered, nonredundant library of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PA14 transposon insertion mutants

TL;DR: To facilitate genome-scale study of the opportunistic human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PA14, a nonredundant library of PA14 transposon mutants (the PA14NR Set) is constructed in which nonessential PA14 genes are represented by a singleTransposon insertion chosen from a comprehensive library of insertion mutants.
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A gut bacterial pathway metabolizes aromatic amino acids into nine circulating metabolites

TL;DR: This work uses a combination of genetics and metabolic profiling to characterize a pathway from the gut symbiont Clostridium sporogenes that generates aromatic amino acid metabolites, and reveals that this pathway produces twelve compounds, nine of which are known to accumulate in host serum.
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Identifying Genetic Determinants Needed to Establish a Human Gut Symbiont in Its Habitat

TL;DR: This work used massively parallel sequencing to monitor the relative abundance of tens of thousands of transposon mutants of a saccharolytic human gut bacterium, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, as they established themselves in wild-type and immunodeficient gnotobiotic mice, in the presence or absence of other human gut commensals.
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The gut microbiota at the intersection of diet and human health

TL;DR: Diet is a key component of the relationship between humans and their microbial residents; gut microbes use ingested nutrients for fundamental biological processes, and the metabolic outputs of those processes may have important impacts on human physiology.
Journal ArticleDOI

H2S: a universal defense against antibiotics in bacteria

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that inactivation of putative cystathionine β-synthase, cystATHionine γ-lyase, or 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase in Bacillus anthracis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Escherichia coli suppresses H2S production, rendering these pathogens highly sensitive to a multitude of antibiotics.
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