4.6 Article

Two-Dimensional Cell Separation: a High-Throughput Approach to Enhance the Culturability of Bacterial Cells from Environmental Samples

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.00007-22

Keywords

not yet cultured; culturomics; cultivability; bacteria; environmental samples

Categories

Funding

  1. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), New Delhi [EMR/2016/006589]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, a novel and simple approach was developed to improve the cultivability of natural microorganisms without the need for sophisticated instrumentation. The method involved gradient centrifugation combined with serial dilution to enhance the recovery of taxa from environmental samples. This approach allowed for the isolation of a higher number of genera and species compared to traditional serial dilution alone, offering access to untapped microbial diversity.
In the manuscript, we have developed a novel yet simple and innovative approach to improving the cultivability of natural microorganisms without sophisticated instrumentation. The method used gradient centrifugation combined with serial dilution (two-dimensional cell separation) to improve taxum recovery from samples. Culture-independent sequence data from various environmental samples have revealed an immense microbial diversity of environmental, clinical, and industrial importance that has not yet been cultured. Cultivation is imperative to validate findings emerging from cultivation-independent molecular data and exploit the isolated organisms for biotechnological purposes. Efforts have been made to boost the cultivability of microbes from environmental samples by use of a range of techniques and instrumentation. The manuscript presents a novel yet simple and innovative approach to improving the cultivability of natural microorganisms without sophisticated instrumentation. By employing gradient centrifugation combined with serial dilution (two-dimensional cell separation), significantly higher numbers of genera (>2-fold higher) and species (>3-fold higher) were isolated from environmental samples, including soil, anaerobic sludge, and landfill leachate, than from using serial dilution alone. This simple and robust protocol can be modified for any environment and culture medium and provides access to untapped microbial diversity. IMPORTANCE In the manuscript, we have developed a novel yet simple and innovative approach to improving the cultivability of natural microorganisms without sophisticated instrumentation. The method used gradient centrifugation combined with serial dilution (two-dimensional cell separation) to improve taxum recovery from samples. This simple and robust protocol can be modified for any environment and culture medium and provides access to untapped microbial diversity. This approach can be incorporated with less labor and complexity in laboratories with minimal instrumentation. As cultivation is a workflow that is well suited to lower-resource microbiology labs, we believe improvements in cultivability can increase opportunities for scientific collaborations between low-resource labs and groups focused on high-resource cultivation-independent methodologies.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available