The impact of kit, environment, and sampling contamination on the observed microbiome of bovine milk

  • Dean C
  • Deng Y
  • Wehri T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Obtaining a non-contaminated sample of bovine milk is challenging due to the nature of the sampling environment and the route by which milk is typically extracted from the mammary gland. Furthermore, the very low bacterial biomass of bovine milk exacerbates the impacts of contaminant sequences in downstream analyses, which can lead to severe biases. Our finding showed that bovine milk contains very low bacterial biomass and each contamination event (including sampling procedure and DNA extraction process) introduces bacteria and/or DNA fragments that easily outnumber the native bacterial cells. This finding has important implications for our ability to draw robust conclusions from milk microbiome data, especially if the data have not been subjected to rigorous decontamination procedures. Based on these findings, we strongly urge researchers to include numerous negative controls into their sampling and sample processing workflows and to utilize several complementary methods for identifying potential contaminants within the resulting sequence data. These measures will improve the accuracy, reliability, reproducibility, and interpretability of milk microbiome data and research.

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APA

Dean, C. J., Deng, Y., Wehri, T. C., Pena-Mosca, F., Ray, T., Crooker, B. A., … Noyes, N. R. (2024). The impact of kit, environment, and sampling contamination on the observed microbiome of bovine milk. MSystems, 9(6). https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01158-23

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