Microfluidic droplets with amended culture media cultivate a greater diversity of soil microorganisms.

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Tác giả: Shaorong Chen, Jing Dai, Paul de Figueiredo, Rohit Gupte, Arum Han, Arul Jayaraman, Yuwen Li, Xiao Jun A Liu, Yang Ouyang, Tony Provin, James E Samuel, Erin Van Schaik, Fang Yang, Aifen Zhou, Jizhong Zhou

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 651.2 Equipment and supplies

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Applied and environmental microbiology , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 721772

 Uncultivated but abundant soil microorganisms have untapped potential for producing broad ranges of natural products, as well as for bioremediation. However, cultivating soil microorganisms while maintaining a broad microorganism diversity to enable phenotyping and functional analysis of as diverse individual isolates as possible remains challenging. In this study, we developed and tested the ability of several culture media formulations that contain defined soil metabolites or soil extracts to maintain microorganism diversity during culture. We also assessed their performance in microfluidic droplet cultivation where single-soil microorganism isolates were encapsulated and cultivated in picoliter-volume water-in-oil emulsion droplets to enable clonal growth needed for downstream functional analyses. Our results show that droplet cultivation with media supplemented by soil extract or soil metabolites enables the recovery of soil microorganisms with higher diversity (up to 1.5-fold higher richness) compared to bulk cultivation methods. Importantly, 1.7-fold more of less abundant (<
 1%) phyla and 11-fold more of unique genera were recovered, demonstrating the utility of this method for interrogating highly diverse soil microorganisms for broad ranges of applications.IMPORTANCEAlthough soil microorganisms hold a significant value in bioproduction and bioremediation, only a small fraction-less than 1%-can be cultured under specific media and cultivation conditions. This indicates that there are ample opportunities in harvesting the diverse environmental microorganisms if isolating and recovering these uncultured microorganisms are possible. This paper presents a new cultivation technique composed of isolating single-soil microorganism cell from an
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