Isolation of microniches from solid-phase and solid suspension in liquid phase microbiomes using laser induced forward transfer
11691436 · 2023-07-04
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Abstract
A method for printing materials by: providing a receiving substrate; providing a target substrate having a photon-transparent support, a photon absorbent interlayer coated on the support, and a transfer material of a solid-phase environmental sample coated on top of the interlayer opposite to the support; and directing photon energy through the transparent support so that the photon energy strikes the interlayer is described. The environmental sample includes living organisms. A portion of the interlayer is energized by absorption of the photon energy, and the energized interlayer causes a transfer of a portion of the environmental sample including the microorganisms across a gap between the target substrate and the receiving substrate and onto the receiving substrate.
Claims
1. A method for printing materials comprising the steps of: providing a receiving substrate; providing a target substrate comprising a photon-transparent support, a photon absorbent interlayer coated on the support, and a transfer material comprising a solid-phase environmental sample coated on top of the interlayer opposite to the support; wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms; wherein the transfer layer is formed by a method selected from: mixing the solid-phase environmental sample with a liquid to form a suspension and forming a layer of the transfer material by applying the suspension to the target substrate and optionally drying the suspension; and forming a layer of the transfer material by applying a slice or portion of the environmental sample to the target substrate and optionally adding a fluid between the environmental sample and the target substrate; providing a source of photon energy; and directing the photon energy through the transparent support so that the photon energy strikes the interlayer; wherein a portion of the interlayer is energized by absorption of the photon energy; and wherein the energized interlayer causes a transfer of a portion of the environmental sample including the microorganisms across a gap between the target substrate and the receiving substrate and onto the receiving substrate.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a soil particle.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a sediment particle.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in human, animal or plant tissue.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a biofilm.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in human or animal feces.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in agricultural, medical, or industrial waste or waste products.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in agricultural, medical, or industrial products.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the receiving substrate comprises a culturing medium.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the receiving substrate comprises a pH buffer, a lysing buffer, a DNA amplification reagent, a PCR primer, a sequencing reagent, an RNA preserving reagent, or a transcript preserving reagent.
11. The method of claim 1, further comprising: incubating the transferred portion of the environmental sample.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the photon-transparent support comprises quartz, sapphire, or amorphous silica.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the photon absorbent interlayer comprises titania, gold, gold alloy, platinum, or titanium.
14. The method of claim 1, wherein the photon absorbent interlayer is 5-100 nm thick.
15. A substrate comprising: a photon-transparent support; a photon absorbent interlayer coated on the support; and a transfer material comprising a solid-phase environmental sample coated on top of the interlayer opposite to the support; wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms.
16. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a soil particle.
17. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a sediment particle.
18. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in human, animal, or plant tissue.
19. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a biofilm.
20. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in human or animal feces.
21. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in agricultural, medical, or industrial waste or waste products.
22. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in agricultural, medical, or industrial products.
23. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the photon-transparent support comprises quartz, sapphire, or amorphous silica.
24. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the photon absorbent interlayer comprises titania, gold, gold alloy, platinum, or titanium.
25. The substrate of claim 15, wherein the photon absorbent interlayer is 5-100 nm thick.
26. A method for printing materials comprising the steps of: providing a receiving substrate; providing a target substrate comprising a photon-transparent support, a photon absorbent interlayer coated on the support, and a transfer material comprising a solid-phase environmental sample coated on top of the interlayer opposite to the support; wherein the environmental sample comprises living microorganisms adhered to or living in a soil particle; providing a source of photon energy; and directing the photon energy through the transparent support so that the photon energy strikes the interlayer; wherein a portion of the interlayer is energized by absorption of the photon energy; and wherein the energized interlayer causes a transfer of a portion of the environmental sample including the microorganisms across a gap between the target substrate and the receiving substrate and onto the receiving substrate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A more complete appreciation will be readily obtained by reference to the following Description of the Example Embodiments and the accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
(11) In the following description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present disclosure. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the present subject matter may be practiced in other embodiments that depart from these specific details. In other instances, detailed descriptions of well-known methods and devices are omitted so as to not obscure the present disclosure with unnecessary detail.
(12) Disclosed herein is a method to isolate soil and sediment microniches directly and in a high throughput manner while retaining the spatial position and viability of microorganisms attached to microparticles as they are originally found in an environmental sample.
(13) The method can isolate microniches from microbiomes (sub-cm portions of the microbiome that contain a dissected portion of microorganisms and/or retained genetic material from the microorganisms) that include individual microorganisms and consortia of microorganisms with retained viability. The method performs these isolations without having to remove microorganisms from their solid-phase support such as the natural state of the microbiome in the nascent environment (e.g., spatially preserved samples from soil and sediment cores, sample from a biofilm or a tissue biopsy). The method uses a nozzle-free, laser-based printing approach to excise microscale portions of the microbiome sample, thereby decreasing the complexity by dramatically reducing the size scale. It is also a high throughput method, enabling thousands of microniches to be isolated and deposited into high throughput analysis or culturing platforms such as microtiter plates within a few minutes. Once isolated, these microniches can be used for study and discovery including: 1) metagenomics analysis and next generation sequencing to (a) characterize organizations of microorganisms in their nascent environment, (b) identify neighbor and near-neighbor species that could unlock symbiotic relationships between microorganisms used in their nascent environment, or (c) identify relationships between microorganisms and their nascent environment (e.g., human, animal, or plant tissue, organic and inorganic soil components, biofilm extracellular polymeric substance); 2) high throughput culturing studies of isolates or consortia to determine optimal growth conditions; and 3) microscale chemical analysis to determine the organic and inorganic components of each microniche. One example of this process is the demonstration that soil microniches can retain viable microorganisms post-printing and that both pure cultures and low-number consortia can be isolated via this method.
(14) The method uses the patented Biological Laser Printing, or BioLP, platform that has been shown to print microscale droplets of biological materials including living bacteria and mammalian cells (U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,294,367; 7,875,324; and 7,294,367, all incorporated herein by reference. All methods and materials disclosed therein may be used in any combination in the presently disclosed method.). The present method can expand this printing approach to any solid-phase, complex microbial system (i.e., microbiome) including soil, sediment, the human microbiome (microorganisms living and growing at the interface of human tissues such as intestinal gut, lung, skin and vaginal), and biofilms in both human and natural environments. The process is depicted in
(15) The titania layer 22 absorbs the incident UV laser pulse 16 and initiates via a photothermal and/or photomechanical process the forward transfer of a voxel 26 of material 24 coated directly on top (shown in the schematic the bio-ink layer is directly below the titania energy transfer layer). The size and amount of bio-ink transferred by the laser pulse can be varied based on the diameter of the beam spot and the incident energy of the laser.
(16) The transferred material 26 lands on a receiving substrate 30, which may be a multi-well plate.
(17) The application of this method towards the isolation of unperturbed solid-phase microniches from microbiomes had not been previously demonstrated. Specifically, this nozzle-free printer can isolate the biological and chemical components of microscale fractions of a complex microbiome rapidly and without harming the living components, and can isolate microorganisms or consortia of microorganisms directly from a solid-phase sample without the need to vortex or sonicate the sample to remove viable microorganisms prior to isolation. The method can be used to deposit microscale portions of a microbiome into high throughput culture plates, which upon further investigation were shown to contain single and multiple culturable species of microorganisms.
(18) The microbiome sample may be applied to the target substrate by mixing it with a liquid to form a solid-phase suspension, and forming a layer of the suspension on the interlayer. The suspension may be dried, but drying may not be necessary where the coating is already a solid or it is desired to keep the suspension as a liquid.
(19) The sample may be applied to the target substrate by adhering slices of the solid-phase microbiome sample onto the target substrate. A fluid may also be used between the sample and the target substrate to aid in adherence. The sample preparation process would be somewhat similar for any solid-phase microbiome. The commonality is the need to (a) sample in such a way as to preserve the spatial organization of the sample (soil core, tissue biopsy, etc.), and (b) slice the microbiome sample thin enough to enable laser printing while retaining the spatial organization of the sample.
(20) The receiving substrate may be one that promotes the growth of any micro-organisms by, for example, having a culturing medium on the substrate. The receiving substrate may also have reagents for lysing and genetic processing, such as PCR, of the micro-organisms. Such reagents include, but are not limited to, a pH buffer, a lysing buffer, a DNA amplification reagent, a PCR primer, a sequencing reagent, an RNA preserving reagent, or a transcript preserving reagent. The receiving substrate with the transferred material may be incubated as is, or the transferred material may be moved to another substrate for incubation.
(21) The process of deconstructing a solid-phase microbiome has several applications, each of which does not change the basic mechanism of using this laser-based tool to isolate and print (forward transfer) a small portion of that microbiome. For instance, culturing microorganisms from this printing process could just involve using a receiving substrate with well-defined microbial growth media in a high throughput well plate and subsequently printing one or multiple portions of the microbiome into those wells. Secondly, one could print portions of the microbiome into a lysing buffer for subsequent DNA amplification and metagenomics sequencing. Additionally, one could print portions of the microbiome sample onto substrate for scanning mass spectrometry analysis, scanning electron microscopy or elemental analysis using energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS).
(22) The method was demonstrated using both liquid and solid compositions of soils from Northern Virginia. Three different top soil samples were obtained from Fairfax County, Va. using sterile 50 mL conical tubes. The samples were taken from a rocky shaded region primarily composed of marine clay. Soil was sampled within 5 cm of the surface. The samples were capped and stored at room temperature until used in the printing experiments, which were all performed within a week of sampling. A soil bio-ink was spread evenly on top of the titania layer on the quartz ribbon. The bio-ink was formed by gently mixing (stirring for 20 seconds) either (a) equal parts of a 50/50 volume mixture of glycerol/sterile water and soil, or (b) equal parts sterile water and soil. Other methods may be used to slice or stamp layers of a microbiome so as to not perturb the spatial distribution of microorganisms in the microbiome prior to printing. Even through the bio-ink process, microorganisms were found to remain adhered to the soil process and in no case was vortexing or sonication used to separate the microorganisms from the soil particles. The bio-ink was then spread directly onto the titania-coated ribbon using a blade, creating a roughly 10 μm thick coating. In the case of the water/soil slurry, the layer dried into a solid coating which was adhered to the titania layer. In the case of the glycerol/water “bio-ink”, the coating retained some moisture, imparted primarily by the non-volatile glycerol, but was still firmly adhered to the titania layer in solid form.
(23) The soil-coated ribbon was then loaded into the BioLP apparatus, with the uncoated quartz side pointing upward towards a microscope focused UV laser pulse (
(24) A range of laser energies from 7 to 23 μJ was investigated for both bio-ink compositions. An Excimer laser (MPB, Inc., Point-Claire, Quebec) source with a maximum pulse repetition rate of 100 Hz was used. Microarrays of printed soil were deposited to glass slides using this maximum repetition rate, but deposition to agar plates and 96-well plates required the use of a much slower repetition rate as the space between printed particles at times exceeded several millimeters. The maximum velocity of the translation stages used to computer-control the receiving substrate movement limited the pulse repetition rate in these cases to ˜20 Hz. In all cases, one laser pulse was used to transfer soil micro-particles to one part of the receiving substrate or one microtiter plate well (multiple micro-particles were not deposited on top of one another). Printed arrays were created by repeating this process in concert with computer-controlled stage movement to rapidly generate spatially oriented patterns of printed soil.
(25) Luria Bertani (LB) broth and agar (Difco; Life Technologies, Frederick, Md., USA) were used to culture micro-organisms in the printed soil microparticles. LB broth is a high nutrient growth media and was chosen not to select for specific species but to promote growth over a wide distribution of microbial phylum so that assessment of microbial viability and diversity post-printing could be performed. Positive growth stemming from printed soil microparticles was determined by colony formation and increased turbidity for LB agar plates and sterile LB broth-filled 96-well plates, respectively. In order to qualitatively ascertain the diversity of isolated micro-organisms and microbial consortia from the printed soil microparticles, 49 positive growth wells (out of the 264 soil printed wells) were selected for further study. Specifically, these cultures were streaked onto LB agar plates to determine how frequently pure isolated cultures were obtained vs. mixed consortia after one step of soil printing.
(26) BioLP requires a thin layer of bio-ink (10-100 μm thick) of solid, liquid, or gel on the ribbon prior to printing. Both bio-ink composition and incident laser energy were investigated to optimize the printing process and demonstrate that different amounts of soil, and thereby total number of micro-organisms, could be deposited with each laser pulse. Both bio-ink compositions (water+soil only and water/glycerol+soil) resulted in adherent thin film formation onto the ribbon surface (dark portions shown in
(27) Microarrays of soil were printed to glass slides (
(28) To demonstrate sustained microbial viability post-printing, 10×10 square arrays of soil microparticles were deposited with 6 mm spacing to two LB agar plates at each of the laser energies depicted in
(29) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Number of isolated colonies counted 24 h after direct soil printing onto LB agar plates at four different laser energies. The average number of colonies per printed microparticle was also calculated from this data (100 printed spots per plate). Number of Number of Calculated average observed colonies observed colonies colonies generated Energy (μJ) from plate 1 from plate 2 per printed spot 23 N/A* N/A* N/A* 14 78 72 0.75 9 50 56 0.53 7 7 11 0.09 *Unable to count due to overrun with overlapping colonies
(30) From the agar plate experiments, 9 μJ was selected as the optimal print condition for further study because that laser energy appeared to produce a nearly equal probability of either single isolates or mixed consortia per printed soil microparticle. Three 96-well sterile culture plates were filled with 200 μL of LB broth. BioLP was then used to print one microparticle of soil into 264 of the 288 wells, keeping 8 of the wells on each plate as negative controls with no printed microparticles. The negative wells remained uncovered during the printing experiment to determine whether cross-contamination occurred during microparticle printing (spraying) to neighboring wells. Each 96-well plate was then covered and incubated for 72 h at 30° C. One example of the printed 96-well culture plates is shown in
(31) Of the total 120 positive growth wells, 49 were selected for streaking onto LB agar plates to investigate the degree of microbial heterogeneity and diversity in the positive growth printed wells. These agar plates were observed after 24, 48, and 96 hours of incubation at 30° C.
(32) By demonstrating a single-step method to isolate pure cultures and microbial consortia directly from soil, vortexing and sonication of the sample was avoided, which is often used by other high throughput techniques to generate liquid cultures by removing microorganisms from their solid-phase environmental sample matrix. BioLP soil printing therefore avoids cell lysis, consortia mixing, and potential incomplete sampling of biodiversity due to poor separation of microorganisms from the solid-phase particles. Additionally, because formation of the bio-ink requires only gentle stirring of the soil slurry, this pre-processing will not fully remove microorganisms from the soil particles. The direct soil printing method presented here most likely isolates near-neighbor microorganisms while they are still attached to the printed particles. For moist soils and ocean sediments, the solid material could be directly spread onto the ribbon as a bio-ink, avoiding mixing or stirring altogether. Alternative methods such as thin-slicing core samples could also be used to facilitate the retention of microbial near-neighbor spatial orientation prior to printing. Therefore, this method of soil printing is the first high throughput approach that attempts to maintain the natural micro-ecological environment, proximity, and relationship to near-neighbors throughout the isolation and screening process. Hypotheses in the current literature suggest that if these near-neighbor relationships can be maintained, a higher percentage of unculturable environmental microorganisms could be cultured under laboratory environments. Specifically, Joint et al. discusses the importance of maintaining consortia for marine samples: “The process of establishing laboratory cultures may destroy any cell-to-cell communication that occurs between organisms in the natural environment and that are vital for growth. Bacteria probably grow as consortia in the sea, and reliance on other bacteria for essential nutrients and substrates is not possible with standard microbiological approaches” (Joint et al., Microb. Biotechnol. 2010, 3(5), 564-575). It is clear from this statement that new technologies are needed to enhance the ability to culture the “unculturable”. The results presented here indicate that BioLP soil printing may be used to maintain cell-to-cell communications and allow isolated samples to grow under laboratory conditions while mimicking the relationships between co-dependent species that help aid growth and survival in the natural environment.
(33) Additional experiments have been performed to demonstrate molecular analysis post-printing of microniches from a soil microbiome. Specifically, soil microniches were printed directly into a lysing buffer for preparation of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of 16s rRNA genes using bacterial-specific primers (27F* and 355R). The electrophoresis gel in
(34) Obviously, many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that the claimed subject matter may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described. Any reference to claim elements in the singular, e.g., using the articles “a”, “an”, “the”, or “said” is not construed as limiting the element to the singular.