Journal article

Guidelines for preventing and reporting contamination in low-biomass microbiome studies

N Fierer, PM Leung, R Lappan, R Eisenhofer, F Ricci, SI Holland, N Dragone, LL Blackall, X Dong, C Dorador, BC Ferrari, J Goordial, SP Holmes, F Inagaki, T Korem, SS Li, TP Makhalanyane, JL Metcalf, N Nagarajan, WD Orsi Show all

Nature Microbiology | Published : 2025

Abstract

Numerous important environments harbour low levels of microbial biomass, including certain human tissues, the atmosphere, plant seeds, treated drinking water, hyper-arid soils and the deep subsurface, with some environments lacking resident microbes altogether. These low microbial biomass environments pose unique challenges for standard DNA-based sequencing approaches, as the inevitability of contamination from external sources becomes a critical concern when working near the limits of detection. Likewise, lower-biomass samples can be disproportionately impacted by cross-contamination and practices suitable for handling higher-biomass samples may produce misleading results when applied to lo..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Awarded by National Science Foundation