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A typical human mouth teems with as many as 700 different species of
microbes. A handful of these have been specifically implicated in
promoting gum disease, dental cavities, and bad breath, but for the most
part, the make-up of this complex ecosystem and its impact on human health
remain largely unexplored. A new device created by Howard Hughes Medical
Institute (HHMI) researchers, however, may make some of the most reclusive
members of this and other microscopic communities much more accessible for
laboratory study.
The vast majority of microbes are notoriously resistant to growing in
laboratory cultures because they are so intricately linked to their own
unique ecosystems. Microbiologists have coaxed less than one percent of
the bacterial species that inhabit natural environments into growing in
culture. But a microfluidics device created by Howard Hughes Medical
Institute investigator Stephen R. Quake and colleagues at Stanford
University– an intricate system of miniscule valves and chambers -- may
help scientists who want to identify and characterize new microbes
circumvent the need to culture them at all.
Research on the device published in the July 9, 2007, issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) has
far-reaching implications for the rapidly developing field of microbial
ecology, as well as advancing microfluidics technologies, which could do
for biology what silicon chips did for electronics. Quake and his
colleagues have already used the device to analyze a rare bacteria found
in the human mouth, using just a single cell.
Various methods have given scientists a glimpse of the profound
diversity that characterizes different microbial worlds. One approach is
to look for variations in the sequence of a specific gene found in all
microorganisms; another is a complete inventory of all the pooled genes in
a microbial community. These types of studies, however, yield few insights
into the character of individual members of a microbial ecosystem, leaving
most species almost entirely enigmatic.
Those unstudied organisms are biology’s dark matter, Quake says. Like
the dark matter that astronomers can only infer must exist in the
universe, these organisms have never been studied directly. Quake and his
colleagues hope their new technology will change that.
“We are hoping to open a whole new chapter in how one understands the
microbial universe,” Quake said. “Microfluidic tools can give us direct
access to this dark matter,” Quake says.
Quake’s research lies at the nexus of physics, biology, and
biotechnology. His microfluidics chips, which he designs to tackle
problems in fields including structural genomics, systems biology,
microbial ecology, and synthetic chemistry, are akin to having a fully
automated laboratory on a postage stamp-sized wafer. Remember the early
days of electronics with all of those big vacuum tubes and wires" Next
came the transistor and finally the silicon chip, which dramatically
revolutionized computers and modern electronics. Microfluidics is
following the track of silicon chips and promises to revolutionize biology
in the same manner.
The microfluidic chip designed by Quake and his colleagues for the
current study is equipped with tiny chambers and valves that allow
researchers to isolate microbes at the nanoliter scale. Because each
microbe is isolated in a vanishingly small volume of liquid, the
concentration of its genetic material within that solution is actually
quite high – meaning Quake and his colleagues can easily amplify and
analyze the genome of an individual cell, eliminating the need to persuade
the organism to multiply in a laboratory culture. The chip offers the
potential to discover untold new species of microbes lurking within deep
sea vents, ordinary dirt, toxic sludge, or virtually any environment.
To demonstrate the power of the new device, the scientists first used
it to target a possible new phylum, of which one member is a rod-shaped
bacterium that live between the gums and teeth of humans. The candidate
phylum, called TM7, has no cultivated or sequenced members. The scientists
demonstrated that they could inject a solution containing multiple types
of microbes into a chip, and manipulate tiny valves to direct individual
rod-shaped bacteria into miniature chambers. Once individual microbes were
isolated, the researchers could extract the DNA and amplify it using
routine methods.
In this way, the researchers were able to sequence and assemble more
than 1,000 genes, providing insight into the physiology of this previously
unstudied group of bacteria. Most TM7 genes, they found, had remarkably
little similarity to genes in known bacterial groups. But some of the
genes hinted at interesting aspects of the organism’s biology, such as an
unusual gliding motion that groups of TM7 bacteria might use to get
around, and a gene shared with bacteria known to cause chronic
inflammation.
Just as importantly, the researchers say, they have demonstrated the
success of their new technology in analyzing a rare component of a complex
microbial community – and there is plenty more to explore. Quake’s team
has already begun using the chip to isolate, identify, and sequence
communities of microbes that reside in termite hindguts, and his lab at
Stanford is custom building chips for other scientists interested in
pursuing any culture-resistant microbe or discovering the dark matter of a
specific environment.
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