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The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans

The characterization of the blood virome is important for the safety of blood-derived transfusion products, and for the identification of emerging pathogens. We explored non-human sequence data from whole-genome sequencing of blood from 8,240 individuals, none of whom were ascertained for any infect...

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Autores principales: Moustafa, Ahmed, Xie, Chao, Kirkness, Ewen, Biggs, William, Wong, Emily, Turpaz, Yaron, Bloom, Kenneth, Delwart, Eric, Nelson, Karen E., Venter, J. Craig, Telenti, Amalio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5378407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28328962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006292
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author Moustafa, Ahmed
Xie, Chao
Kirkness, Ewen
Biggs, William
Wong, Emily
Turpaz, Yaron
Bloom, Kenneth
Delwart, Eric
Nelson, Karen E.
Venter, J. Craig
Telenti, Amalio
author_facet Moustafa, Ahmed
Xie, Chao
Kirkness, Ewen
Biggs, William
Wong, Emily
Turpaz, Yaron
Bloom, Kenneth
Delwart, Eric
Nelson, Karen E.
Venter, J. Craig
Telenti, Amalio
author_sort Moustafa, Ahmed
collection PubMed
description The characterization of the blood virome is important for the safety of blood-derived transfusion products, and for the identification of emerging pathogens. We explored non-human sequence data from whole-genome sequencing of blood from 8,240 individuals, none of whom were ascertained for any infectious disease. Viral sequences were extracted from the pool of sequence reads that did not map to the human reference genome. Analyses sifted through close to 1 Petabyte of sequence data and performed 0.5 trillion similarity searches. With a lower bound for identification of 2 viral genomes/100,000 cells, we mapped sequences to 94 different viruses, including sequences from 19 human DNA viruses, proviruses and RNA viruses (herpesviruses, anelloviruses, papillomaviruses, three polyomaviruses, adenovirus, HIV, HTLV, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, parvovirus B19, and influenza virus) in 42% of the study participants. Of possible relevance to transfusion medicine, we identified Merkel cell polyomavirus in 49 individuals, papillomavirus in blood of 13 individuals, parvovirus B19 in 6 individuals, and the presence of herpesvirus 8 in 3 individuals. The presence of DNA sequences from two RNA viruses was unexpected: Hepatitis C virus is revealing of an integration event, while the influenza virus sequence resulted from immunization with a DNA vaccine. Age, sex and ancestry contributed significantly to the prevalence of infection. The remaining 75 viruses mostly reflect extensive contamination of commercial reagents and from the environment. These technical problems represent a major challenge for the identification of novel human pathogens. Increasing availability of human whole-genome sequences will contribute substantial amounts of data on the composition of the normal and pathogenic human blood virome. Distinguishing contaminants from real human viruses is challenging.
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spelling pubmed-53784072017-04-06 The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans Moustafa, Ahmed Xie, Chao Kirkness, Ewen Biggs, William Wong, Emily Turpaz, Yaron Bloom, Kenneth Delwart, Eric Nelson, Karen E. Venter, J. Craig Telenti, Amalio PLoS Pathog Research Article The characterization of the blood virome is important for the safety of blood-derived transfusion products, and for the identification of emerging pathogens. We explored non-human sequence data from whole-genome sequencing of blood from 8,240 individuals, none of whom were ascertained for any infectious disease. Viral sequences were extracted from the pool of sequence reads that did not map to the human reference genome. Analyses sifted through close to 1 Petabyte of sequence data and performed 0.5 trillion similarity searches. With a lower bound for identification of 2 viral genomes/100,000 cells, we mapped sequences to 94 different viruses, including sequences from 19 human DNA viruses, proviruses and RNA viruses (herpesviruses, anelloviruses, papillomaviruses, three polyomaviruses, adenovirus, HIV, HTLV, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, parvovirus B19, and influenza virus) in 42% of the study participants. Of possible relevance to transfusion medicine, we identified Merkel cell polyomavirus in 49 individuals, papillomavirus in blood of 13 individuals, parvovirus B19 in 6 individuals, and the presence of herpesvirus 8 in 3 individuals. The presence of DNA sequences from two RNA viruses was unexpected: Hepatitis C virus is revealing of an integration event, while the influenza virus sequence resulted from immunization with a DNA vaccine. Age, sex and ancestry contributed significantly to the prevalence of infection. The remaining 75 viruses mostly reflect extensive contamination of commercial reagents and from the environment. These technical problems represent a major challenge for the identification of novel human pathogens. Increasing availability of human whole-genome sequences will contribute substantial amounts of data on the composition of the normal and pathogenic human blood virome. Distinguishing contaminants from real human viruses is challenging. Public Library of Science 2017-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5378407/ /pubmed/28328962 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006292 Text en © 2017 Moustafa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moustafa, Ahmed
Xie, Chao
Kirkness, Ewen
Biggs, William
Wong, Emily
Turpaz, Yaron
Bloom, Kenneth
Delwart, Eric
Nelson, Karen E.
Venter, J. Craig
Telenti, Amalio
The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans
title The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans
title_full The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans
title_fullStr The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans
title_full_unstemmed The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans
title_short The blood DNA virome in 8,000 humans
title_sort blood dna virome in 8,000 humans
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5378407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28328962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006292
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