Comparison of ultrafiltration and iron chloride flocculation in the preparation of aquatic viromes from contrasting sample types

PeerJ. 2021 May 5:9:e11111. doi: 10.7717/peerj.11111. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Viral metagenomes (viromes) are a valuable untargeted tool for studying viral diversity and the central roles viruses play in host disease, ecology, and evolution. Establishing effective methods to concentrate and purify viral genomes prior to sequencing is essential for high quality viromes. Using virus spike-and-recovery experiments, we stepwise compared two common approaches for virus concentration, ultrafiltration and iron chloride flocculation, across diverse matrices: wastewater influent, wastewater secondary effluent, river water, and seawater. Viral DNA was purified by removing cellular DNA via chloroform cell lysis, filtration, and enzymatic degradation of extra-viral DNA. We found that viral genomes were concentrated 1-2 orders of magnitude more with ultrafiltration than iron chloride flocculation for all matrices and resulted in higher quality DNA suitable for amplification-free and long-read sequencing. Given its widespread use and utility as an inexpensive field method for virome sampling, we nonetheless sought to optimize iron flocculation. We found viruses were best concentrated in seawater with five-fold higher iron concentrations than the standard used, inhibition of DNase activity reduced purification effectiveness, and five-fold more iron was needed to flocculate viruses from freshwater than seawater-critical knowledge for those seeking to apply this broadly used method to freshwater virome samples. Overall, our results demonstrated that ultrafiltration and purification performed better than iron chloride flocculation and purification in the tested matrices. Given that the method performance depended on the solids content and salinity of the samples, we suggest spike-and-recovery experiments be applied when concentrating and purifying sample types that diverge from those tested here.

Keywords: Chloroform; DNase; Iron chloride flocculation; Seawater; Ultrafiltration; Viral concentration; Viral metagenomics; Viral purification; Viromes; Wastewater.

Grants and funding

This project was funded by NSF PIRE Halting Environmental Antimicrobial Resistance Dissemination (HEARD) (Project No. 1545756) and the USDA (Project No. 2016-68003-24601). Kathryn Langenfeld was funded by an NSF GRFP (Fellow ID 2016216003), University of Michigan Jack A. Borchardt Fellowship, and University of Michigan Integrated Training in Microbial Systems (ITiMS) Fellowship that is funded by the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.