ABSTRACT
N. gonorrhoeae, which causes the sexually transmissible infection gonorrhoea, remains a significant public health threat globally, with challenges posed by increasing transmission and antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The COVID-19 pandemic introduced exceptional circumstances into communicable disease control, impacting the transmission of gonorrhoea and other infectious diseases. Through phylogenomic and phylodynamic analysis of 5881 N. gonorrhoeae genomes from Australia, we investigated N. gonorrhoeae transmission over five years, including a time period during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a novel cgMLST-based genetic threshold, we demonstrate persistence of large N. gonorrhoeae genomic clusters over several years, with some persistent clusters associated with heterosexual transmission. We observed a decline in both N. gonorrhoeae transmission and genomic diversity during the COVID-19 pandemic, suggestive of an evolutionary bottleneck. The longitudinal, occult transmission of N. gonorrhoeae over many years further highlights the urgent need for improved diagnostic, treatment, and prevention strategies for gonorrhoea.
Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Genome, Bacterial , Genomics , Gonorrhea , Neisseria gonorrhoeae , Phylogeny , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/genetics , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/drug effects , Humans , Gonorrhea/transmission , Gonorrhea/epidemiology , Gonorrhea/microbiology , Australia/epidemiology , Male , Female , COVID-19/transmission , COVID-19/epidemiology , Longitudinal Studies , Adult , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , Young AdultABSTRACT
In vertebrates, including humans, individuals harbor gut microbial communities whose species composition and relative proportions of dominant microbial groups are tremendously varied. Although external and stochastic factors clearly contribute to the individuality of the microbiota, the fundamental principles dictating how environmental factors and host genetic factors combine to shape this complex ecosystem are largely unknown and require systematic study. Here we examined factors that affect microbiota composition in a large (n = 645) mouse advanced intercross line originating from a cross between C57BL/6J and an ICR-derived outbred line (HR). Quantitative pyrosequencing of the microbiota defined a core measurable microbiota (CMM) of 64 conserved taxonomic groups that varied quantitatively across most animals in the population. Although some of this variation can be explained by litter and cohort effects, individual host genotype had a measurable contribution. Testing of the CMM abundances for cosegregation with 530 fully informative SNP markers identified 18 host quantitative trait loci (QTL) that show significant or suggestive genome-wide linkage with relative abundances of specific microbial taxa. These QTL affect microbiota composition in three ways; some loci control individual microbial species, some control groups of related taxa, and some have putative pleiotropic effects on groups of distantly related organisms. These data provide clear evidence for the importance of host genetic control in shaping individual microbiome diversity in mammals, a key step toward understanding the factors that govern the assemblages of gut microbiota associated with complex diseases.
Subject(s)
Bacteria/genetics , Host-Pathogen Interactions/physiology , Intestines/microbiology , Multifactorial Inheritance/physiology , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Quantitative Trait Loci/physiology , Animals , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/growth & development , Breeding , Genetic Linkage/physiology , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Mice , Mice, Inbred ICRABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: The 2022 outbreak of mpox (formerly known as monkeypox) led to the spread of monkeypox virus (MPXV) in over 110 countries, demanding effective disease management and surveillance. As current diagnostics rely largely on centralised laboratory testing, our objective was to develop a simple rapid point-of-care assay to detect MPXV in clinical samples using isothermal amplification coupled with CRISPR and CRISPR-associated protein (Cas) technology. METHODS: In this proof-of-concept study, we developed a portable isothermal amplification CRISPR-Cas12a-based assay for the detection of MPXV. We designed a panel of 22 primer-guide RNA sets using pangenome and gene-agnostic approaches, and subsequently shortlisted the three sets producing the strongest signals for evaluation of analytical sensitivity and specificity using a fluorescence-based readout. The set displaying 100% specificity and the lowest limit of detection (LOD) was selected for further assay validation using both a fluorescence-based and lateral-flow readout. Assay specificity was confirmed using a panel of viral and bacterial pathogens. Finally, we did a blind concordance study on genomic DNA extracted from 185 clinical samples, comparing assay results with a gold-standard quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay. We identified the optimal time to detection and analysed the performance of the assay relative to qPCR using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. We also assessed the compatibility with lateral-flow strips, both visually and computationally, where strips were interpreted blinded to the fluorescence results on the basis of the presence or absence of test bands. FINDINGS: With an optimal run duration of approximately 45 min from isothermal amplification to CRISPR-assay readout, the MPXV recombinase polymerase amplification CRISPR-Cas12a-based assay with the selected primer-guide set had an LOD of 1 copy per µL and 100% specificity against tested viral pathogens. Blinded concordance testing of 185 clinical samples resulted in 100% sensitivity (95% CI 89·3-100) and 99·3% specificity (95% CI 95·7-100) using the fluorescence readout. For optimal time to detection by fluorescence readout, we estimated the areas under the ROC curve to be 0·98 at 2 min and 0·99 at 4 min. Lateral-flow strips had 100% sensitivity (89·3-100) and 98·6% specificity (94·7-100) with both visual and computational assessment. Overall, lateral-flow results were highly concordant with fluorescence-based readouts (179 of 185 tests, 96·8% concordant), with discrepancies associated with low viral load samples. INTERPRETATION: Our assay for the diagnosis of mpox displayed good performance characteristics compared with qPCR. Although optimisation of the assay will be required before deployment, its usability and versatility present a potential solution to MPXV detection in low-resource and remote settings, as well as a means of community-based, on-site testing. FUNDING: Victorian Medical Research Accelerator Fund and the Australian Government Department of Health.
ABSTRACT
Bacteriophages have important roles in the ecology of the human gut microbiome but are under-represented in reference databases. To address this problem, we assembled the Metagenomic Gut Virus catalogue that comprises 189,680 viral genomes from 11,810 publicly available human stool metagenomes. Over 75% of genomes represent double-stranded DNA phages that infect members of the Bacteroidia and Clostridia classes. Based on sequence clustering we identified 54,118 candidate viral species, 92% of which were not found in existing databases. The Metagenomic Gut Virus catalogue improves detection of viruses in stool metagenomes and accounts for nearly 40% of CRISPR spacers found in human gut Bacteria and Archaea. We also produced a catalogue of 459,375 viral protein clusters to explore the functional potential of the gut virome. This revealed tens of thousands of diversity-generating retroelements, which use error-prone reverse transcription to mutate target genes and may be involved in the molecular arms race between phages and their bacterial hosts.
Subject(s)
DNA Viruses/genetics , Gastrointestinal Microbiome/genetics , Genome, Viral/genetics , Archaea/virology , Bacteria/virology , Bacteriophages/genetics , Catalogs as Topic , DNA Viruses/classification , DNA, Viral/genetics , Feces/microbiology , Genetic Variation , Humans , Metagenomics , Phylogeny , Viral Proteins/geneticsABSTRACT
Viruses of bacteria and archaea are important players in global carbon cycling as well as drivers of host evolution, yet the taxonomic classification of viruses remains a challenge due to their genetic diversity and absence of universally conserved genes. Traditional classification approaches employ a combination of phenotypic and genetic information which is no longer scalable in the era of bulk viral genome recovery through metagenomics. Here, we evaluate a phylogenetic approach for the classification of tailed double-stranded DNA viruses from the order Caudovirales by inferring a phylogeny from the concatenation of 77 single-copy protein markers using a maximum-likelihood method. Our approach is largely consistent with the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses, with 72 and 89% congruence at the subfamily and genus levels, respectively. Discrepancies could be attributed to misclassifications and a small number of highly mosaic genera confounding the phylogenetic signal. We also show that confidently resolved nodes in the concatenated protein tree are highly reproducible across different software and models, and conclude that the approach can serve as a framework for a rank-normalized taxonomy of most tailed double-stranded DNA viruses.
Subject(s)
Caudovirales/classification , DNA Viruses/classification , Phylogeny , Viral Proteins/classification , Archaea/virology , Bacteria/virology , Caudovirales/genetics , Classification , DNA Viruses/genetics , Genes, Viral/genetics , Genome, Viral , Viral Proteins/geneticsABSTRACT
Viral discovery is accelerating at an unprecedented rate due to continuing advances in culture-independent sequence-based analyses. One important facet of this discovery is identification of the hosts of these recently characterized uncultured viruses. To this end, we have adapted the viral tagging approach, which bypasses the need for culture-based methods to identify host-phage pairings. Fluorescently labelled anonymous virions adsorb to unlabelled anonymous bacterial host cells, which are then individually sorted as host-phage pairs, followed by genome amplification and high-throughput sequencing to establish the identities of both the host and the attached virus(es). We demonstrate single-cell viral tagging using the faecal microbiome, including cross-tagging of viruses and bacteria between human subjects. A total of 363 unique host-phage pairings were predicted, most of which were subject-specific and involved previously uncharacterized viruses despite the majority of their bacterial hosts having known taxonomy. One-fifth of these pairs were confirmed by multiple individual tagged cells. Viruses targeting more than one bacterial species were conspicuously absent in the host-phage network, suggesting that phages are not major vectors of inter-species horizontal gene transfer in the human gut. A high level of cross-reactivity between phages and bacteria from different subjects was noted despite subject-specific viral profiles, which has implications for faecal microbiota transplant therapy.