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The impacts of faecal subsampling on microbial compositional profiling.

Amanda J CoxLily HughesTiffanie M NelsonKyle M Hatton-JonesRebecca RamseyAllan W CrippsNicholas P West
Published in: BMC research notes (2022)
There were no significant differences in OTU count (p = 0.32) or Shannon diversity index (p = 0.29) between the subsamples. Comparison of relative abundance for identified taxa revealed very few differences between subsamples. At the lower levels of taxonomic classification differences in abundance of the Bacillales (p = 0.02) and the Eubacteriaceae family (p = 0.03), and the Eubacterium genera (p = 0.03) were noted. The observation of consistent microbial compositional profiles between faecal subsamples from the beginning and end of a single bowel movement is an important outcome for study designs employing this approach to faecal sample collection. These findings provide assurance that use of a faecal subsample for microbial composition profiling is generally representative of the gut luminal contents more broadly.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • single cell
  • antibiotic resistance genes
  • deep learning
  • clinical evaluation