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1.
Lancet Microbe ; 2024 Jun 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38851206

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The antibiotic bedaquiline is a key component of new WHO regimens for drug-resistant tuberculosis; however, predicting bedaquiline resistance from bacterial genotypes remains challenging. We aimed to understand the genetic mechanisms of bedaquiline resistance by analysing Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from South Africa. METHODS: For this genomic analysis, we conducted whole-genome sequencing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis samples collected at two referral laboratories in Cape Town and Johannesburg, covering regions of South Africa with a high prevalence of tuberculosis. We used the tool ARIBA to measure the status of predefined genes that are associated with bedaquiline resistance. To produce a broad genetic landscape of M tuberculosis in South Africa, we extended our analysis to include all publicly available isolates from the European Nucleotide Archive, including isolates obtained by the CRyPTIC consortium, for which minimum inhibitory concentrations of bedaquiline were available. FINDINGS: Between Jan 10, 2019, and July, 22, 2020, we sequenced 505 M tuberculosis isolates from 461 patients. Of the 64 isolates with mutations within the mmpR5 regulatory gene, we found 53 (83%) had independent acquisition of 31 different mutations, with a particular enrichment of truncated MmpR5 in bedaquiline-resistant isolates resulting from either frameshift mutations or the introduction of an insertion element. Truncation occurred across three M tuberculosis lineages, and were present in 66% of bedaquiline-resistant isolates. Although the distributions overlapped, the median minimum inhibitory concentration of bedaquiline was 0·25 mg/L (IQR 0·12-0·25) in mmpR5-disrupted isolates, compared with 0·06 mg/L (0·03-0·06) in wild-type M tuberculosis. INTERPRETATION: Reduction in the susceptibility of M tuberculosis to bedaquiline has evolved repeatedly across the phylogeny. In our data, we see no evidence that this reduction has led to the spread of a successful strain in South Africa. Binary phenotyping based on the bedaquiline breakpoint might be inappropriate to monitor resistance to this drug. We recommend the use of minimum inhibitory concentrations in addition to MmpR5 truncation screening to identify moderate increases in resistance to bedaquiline. FUNDING: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

2.
Microb Genom ; 10(2)2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38358325

RESUMO

The COVID-19 pandemic has seen large-scale pathogen genomic sequencing efforts, becoming part of the toolbox for surveillance and epidemic research. This resulted in an unprecedented level of data sharing to open repositories, which has actively supported the identification of SARS-CoV-2 structure, molecular interactions, mutations and variants, and facilitated vaccine development and drug reuse studies and design. The European COVID-19 Data Platform was launched to support this data sharing, and has resulted in the deposition of several million SARS-CoV-2 raw reads. In this paper we describe (1) open data sharing, (2) tools for submission, analysis, visualisation and data claiming (e.g. ORCiD), (3) the systematic analysis of these datasets, at scale via the SARS-CoV-2 Data Hubs as well as (4) lessons learnt. This paper describes a component of the Platform, the SARS-CoV-2 Data Hubs, which enable the extension and set up of infrastructure that we intend to use more widely in the future for pathogen surveillance and pandemic preparedness.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , Humanos , SARS-CoV-2/genética , Pandemias , COVID-19/epidemiologia , Genômica , Disseminação de Informação
3.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Apr 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38746185

RESUMO

The SARS-CoV-2 genome occupies a unique place in infection biology - it is the most highly sequenced genome on earth (making up over 20% of public sequencing datasets) with fine scale information on sampling date and geography, and has been subject to unprecedented intense analysis. As a result, these phylogenetic data are an incredibly valuable resource for science and public health. However, the vast majority of the data was sequenced by tiling amplicons across the full genome, with amplicon schemes that changed over the pandemic as mutations in the viral genome interacted with primer binding sites. In combination with the disparate set of genome assembly workflows and lack of consistent quality control (QC) processes, the current genomes have many systematic errors that have evolved with the virus and amplicon schemes. These errors have significant impacts on the phylogeny, and therefore over the last few years, many thousands of hours of researchers time has been spent in "eyeballing" trees, looking for artefacts, and then patching the tree. Given the huge value of this dataset, we therefore set out to reprocess the complete set of public raw sequence data in a rigorous amplicon-aware manner, and build a cleaner phylogeny. Here we provide a global tree of 3,960,704 samples, built from a consistently assembled set of high quality consensus sequences from all available public data as of March 2023, viewable at https://viridian.taxonium.org. Each genome was constructed using a novel assembly tool called Viridian (https://github.com/iqbal-lab-org/viridian), developed specifically to process amplicon sequence data, eliminating artefactual errors and mask the genome at low quality positions. We provide simulation and empirical validation of the methodology, and quantify the improvement in the phylogeny. Phase 2 of our project will address the fact that the data in the public archives is heavily geographically biased towards the Global North. We therefore have contributed new raw data to ENA/SRA from many countries including Ghana, Thailand, Laos, Sri Lanka, India, Argentina and Singapore. We will incorporate these, along with all public raw data submitted between March 2023 and the current day, into an updated set of assemblies, and phylogeny. We hope the tree, consensus sequences and Viridian will be a valuable resource for researchers.

4.
Lancet Microbe ; 3(4): e265-e273, 2022 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35373160

RESUMO

Background: Molecular diagnostics are considered the most promising route to achieving rapid, universal drug susceptibility testing for Mycobacterium tuberculosiscomplex (MTBC). We aimed to generate a WHO endorsed catalogue of mutations to serve as a global standard for interpreting molecular information for drug resistance prediction. Methods: A candidate gene approach was used to identify mutations as associated with resistance, or consistent with susceptibility, for 13 WHO endorsed anti-tuberculosis drugs. 38,215 MTBC isolates with paired whole-genome sequencing and phenotypic drug susceptibility testing data were amassed from 45 countries. For each mutation, a contingency table of binary phenotypes and presence or absence of the mutation computed positive predictive value, and Fisher's exact tests generated odds ratios and Benjamini-Hochberg corrected p-values. Mutations were graded as Associated with Resistance if present in at least 5 isolates, if the odds ratio was >1 with a statistically significant corrected p-value, and if the lower bound of the 95% confidence interval on the positive predictive value for phenotypic resistance was >25%. A series of expert rules were applied for final confidence grading of each mutation. Findings: 15,667 associations were computed for 13,211 unique mutations linked to one or more drugs. 1,149/15,667 (7·3%) mutations were classified as associated with phenotypic resistance and 107/15,667 (0·7%) were deemed consistent with susceptibility. For rifampicin, isoniazid, ethambutol, fluoroquinolones, and streptomycin, the mutations' pooled sensitivity was >80%. Specificity was over 95% for all drugs except ethionamide (91·4%), moxifloxacin (91·6%) and ethambutol (93·3%). Only two resistance mutations were classified for bedaquiline, delamanid, clofazimine, and linezolid as prevalence of phenotypic resistance was low for these drugs. Interpretation: This first WHO endorsed catalogue of molecular targets for MTBC drug susceptibility testing provides a global standard for resistance interpretation. Its existence should encourage the implementation of molecular diagnostics by National Tuberculosis Programmes. Funding: UNITAID, Wellcome, MRC, BMGF.


Assuntos
Etambutol , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Antituberculosos/farmacologia , Resistência a Medicamentos , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , Mutação , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genética , Organização Mundial da Saúde
5.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 1634, 2020 01 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32005884

RESUMO

Next generation sequencing (NGS) is a trending new standard for genotypic HIV-1 drug resistance (HIVDR) testing. Many NGS HIVDR data analysis pipelines have been independently developed, each with variable outputs and data management protocols. Standardization of such analytical methods and comparison of available pipelines are lacking, yet may impact subsequent HIVDR interpretation and other downstream applications. Here we compared the performance of five NGS HIVDR pipelines using proficiency panel samples from NIAID Virology Quality Assurance (VQA) program. Ten VQA panel specimens were genotyped by each of six international laboratories using their own in-house NGS assays. Raw NGS data were then processed using each of the five different pipelines including HyDRA, MiCall, PASeq, Hivmmer and DEEPGEN. All pipelines detected amino acid variants (AAVs) at full range of frequencies (1~100%) and demonstrated good linearity as compared to the reference frequency values. While the sensitivity in detecting low abundance AAVs, with frequencies between 1~20%, is less a concern for all pipelines, their specificity dramatically decreased at AAV frequencies <2%, suggesting that 2% threshold may be a more reliable reporting threshold for ensured specificity in AAV calling and reporting. More variations were observed among the pipelines when low abundance AAVs are concerned, likely due to differences in their NGS read quality control strategies. Findings from this study highlight the need for standardized strategies for NGS HIVDR data analysis, especially for the detection of minority HIVDR variants.


Assuntos
Farmacorresistência Viral/genética , HIV-1/genética , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/métodos , Aminoácidos/genética , Variação Genética/genética , Genótipo , Infecções por HIV/virologia , Soropositividade para HIV , Humanos , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
6.
PLoS One ; 13(4): e0196434, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29698444

RESUMO

Genomic analysis of cancer tissues is an essential aspect of personalized oncology treatment. Though it has been suggested that formalin fixation of patient tissues may be suboptimal for molecular studies, this tissue processing approach remains the industry standard. Therefore clinical molecular laboratories must be able to work with formalin fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) material. This study examines the effects of pre-analytic variables introduced by routine pathology processing on specimens used for clinical reports produced by next-generation sequencing technology. Tissue resected from three colorectal cancer patients was subjected to 2, 15, 24, and 48 hour fixation times in neutral buffered formalin. DNA was extracted from all tissues twice, once with uracil-N-glycosylase (UNG) treatment to counter deamination effects, and once without. Of note, deamination events at methylated cytosine, as found at CpG sites, remains unaffected by UNG. After extraction a two-step PCR targeted sequencing method was performed using the Illumina MiSeq and the data was analyzed via a custom-built bioinformatics pipeline, including filtration of reads with mapping quality <30. A larger baseline group of samples (n = 20) was examined to establish if there was a sample performance difference between the two DNA extraction methods, with/without UNG treatment. There was no statistical difference between sequencing performance of the two extraction methods when comparing read counts (raw, mapped, and filtered) and read quality (% mapped, % filtered). Analyzing mutation type, there was no significant difference between mutation calls until the 48 hour fixation treatment. At 48 hours there is a significant increase in C/G->T/A mutations that is not represented in DNA treated with UNG. This suggests these errors may be due to deamination events triggered by a longer fixation time. However the allelic frequency of these events remained below the limit of detection for reportable mutations in this assay (<2%). We do however recommend that suspected intratumoral heterogeneity events be verified by re-sequencing the same FFPE block.


Assuntos
Formaldeído/química , Inclusão em Parafina/métodos , Neoplasias Colorretais/patologia , Biologia Computacional , Desaminação , Reações Falso-Positivas , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Humanos , Mutação , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Uracila-DNA Glicosidase/química , Uracila-DNA Glicosidase/metabolismo
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