Cargando…

Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population

A broad spectrum detection platform that provides sequence level resolution of target regions would have a significant impact in public health, case management, and means of expanding our understanding of the etiology of diseases. A previously developed respiratory pathogen microarray (RPM v.1) demo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lin, Baochuan, Malanoski, Anthony P., Wang, Zheng, Blaney, Kate M., Ligler, Adam G., Rowley, Robb K., Hanson, Eric H., von Rosenvinge, Erik, Ligler, Frances S., Kusterbeck, Anne W., Metzgar, David, Barrozo, Christopher P., Russell, Kevin L., Tibbetts, Clark, Schnur, Joel M., Stenger, David A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1855431/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17502915
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000419
_version_ 1782133147328053248
author Lin, Baochuan
Malanoski, Anthony P.
Wang, Zheng
Blaney, Kate M.
Ligler, Adam G.
Rowley, Robb K.
Hanson, Eric H.
von Rosenvinge, Erik
Ligler, Frances S.
Kusterbeck, Anne W.
Metzgar, David
Barrozo, Christopher P.
Russell, Kevin L.
Tibbetts, Clark
Schnur, Joel M.
Stenger, David A.
author_facet Lin, Baochuan
Malanoski, Anthony P.
Wang, Zheng
Blaney, Kate M.
Ligler, Adam G.
Rowley, Robb K.
Hanson, Eric H.
von Rosenvinge, Erik
Ligler, Frances S.
Kusterbeck, Anne W.
Metzgar, David
Barrozo, Christopher P.
Russell, Kevin L.
Tibbetts, Clark
Schnur, Joel M.
Stenger, David A.
author_sort Lin, Baochuan
collection PubMed
description A broad spectrum detection platform that provides sequence level resolution of target regions would have a significant impact in public health, case management, and means of expanding our understanding of the etiology of diseases. A previously developed respiratory pathogen microarray (RPM v.1) demonstrated the capability of this platform for this purpose. This newly developed RPM v.1 was used to analyze 424 well-characterized nasal wash specimens from patients presenting with febrile respiratory illness in the Washington, D. C. metropolitan region. For each specimen, the RPM v.1 results were compared against composite reference assay (viral and bacterial culture and, where appropriate, RT-PCR/PCR) results. Across this panel, the RPM assay showed ≥98% overall agreement for all the organisms detected compared with reference methods. Additionally, the RPM v.1 results provide sequence information which allowed phylogenetic classification of circulating influenza A viruses in ∼250 clinical specimens, and allowed monitoring the genetic variation as well as antigenic variability prediction. Multiple pathogens (2–4) were detected in 58 specimens (13.7%) with notably increased abundances of respiratory colonizers (esp. S. pneumoniae) during viral infection. This first-ever comparison of a broad-spectrum viral and bacterial identification technology of this type against a large battery of conventional “gold standard” assays confirms the utility of the approach for both medical surveillance and investigations of complex etiologies of illness caused by respiratory co-infections.
format Text
id pubmed-1855431
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-18554312007-05-14 Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population Lin, Baochuan Malanoski, Anthony P. Wang, Zheng Blaney, Kate M. Ligler, Adam G. Rowley, Robb K. Hanson, Eric H. von Rosenvinge, Erik Ligler, Frances S. Kusterbeck, Anne W. Metzgar, David Barrozo, Christopher P. Russell, Kevin L. Tibbetts, Clark Schnur, Joel M. Stenger, David A. PLoS One Research Article A broad spectrum detection platform that provides sequence level resolution of target regions would have a significant impact in public health, case management, and means of expanding our understanding of the etiology of diseases. A previously developed respiratory pathogen microarray (RPM v.1) demonstrated the capability of this platform for this purpose. This newly developed RPM v.1 was used to analyze 424 well-characterized nasal wash specimens from patients presenting with febrile respiratory illness in the Washington, D. C. metropolitan region. For each specimen, the RPM v.1 results were compared against composite reference assay (viral and bacterial culture and, where appropriate, RT-PCR/PCR) results. Across this panel, the RPM assay showed ≥98% overall agreement for all the organisms detected compared with reference methods. Additionally, the RPM v.1 results provide sequence information which allowed phylogenetic classification of circulating influenza A viruses in ∼250 clinical specimens, and allowed monitoring the genetic variation as well as antigenic variability prediction. Multiple pathogens (2–4) were detected in 58 specimens (13.7%) with notably increased abundances of respiratory colonizers (esp. S. pneumoniae) during viral infection. This first-ever comparison of a broad-spectrum viral and bacterial identification technology of this type against a large battery of conventional “gold standard” assays confirms the utility of the approach for both medical surveillance and investigations of complex etiologies of illness caused by respiratory co-infections. Public Library of Science 2007-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1855431/ /pubmed/17502915 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000419 Text en This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lin, Baochuan
Malanoski, Anthony P.
Wang, Zheng
Blaney, Kate M.
Ligler, Adam G.
Rowley, Robb K.
Hanson, Eric H.
von Rosenvinge, Erik
Ligler, Frances S.
Kusterbeck, Anne W.
Metzgar, David
Barrozo, Christopher P.
Russell, Kevin L.
Tibbetts, Clark
Schnur, Joel M.
Stenger, David A.
Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population
title Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population
title_full Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population
title_fullStr Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population
title_full_unstemmed Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population
title_short Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population
title_sort application of broad-spectrum, sequence-based pathogen identification in an urban population
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1855431/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17502915
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000419
work_keys_str_mv AT linbaochuan applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT malanoskianthonyp applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT wangzheng applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT blaneykatem applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT ligleradamg applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT rowleyrobbk applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT hansonerich applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT vonrosenvingeerik applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT liglerfrancess applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT kusterbeckannew applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT metzgardavid applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT barrozochristopherp applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT russellkevinl applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT tibbettsclark applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT schnurjoelm applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation
AT stengerdavida applicationofbroadspectrumsequencebasedpathogenidentificationinanurbanpopulation