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Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples

Until recently, the method of choice to characterize viral diversity consisted in cloning PCR amplicons of full-length viral genomes and Sanger-sequencing of multiple clones. However, this is extremely laborious, time-consuming, and low-throughput. Next generation short-read sequencing appears also...

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Autores principales: Sauvage, Virginie, Boizeau, Laure, Candotti, Daniel, Vandenbogaert, Mathias, Servant-Delmas, Annabelle, Caro, Valérie, Laperche, Syria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5864009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29566006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194366
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author Sauvage, Virginie
Boizeau, Laure
Candotti, Daniel
Vandenbogaert, Mathias
Servant-Delmas, Annabelle
Caro, Valérie
Laperche, Syria
author_facet Sauvage, Virginie
Boizeau, Laure
Candotti, Daniel
Vandenbogaert, Mathias
Servant-Delmas, Annabelle
Caro, Valérie
Laperche, Syria
author_sort Sauvage, Virginie
collection PubMed
description Until recently, the method of choice to characterize viral diversity consisted in cloning PCR amplicons of full-length viral genomes and Sanger-sequencing of multiple clones. However, this is extremely laborious, time-consuming, and low-throughput. Next generation short-read sequencing appears also limited by its inability to directly sequence full-length viral genomes. The MinION(™) device recently developed by Oxford Nanopore Technologies can be a promising alternative by applying long-read single-molecule sequencing directly to the overall amplified products generated in a PCR reaction. This new technology was evaluated by using hepatitis B virus (HBV) as a model. Several previously characterized HBV-infected clinical samples were investigated including recombinant virus, variants that harbored deletions and mixed population. Original MinION device was able to generate individual complete 3,200-nt HBV genome sequences and to identify recombinant variants. MinION was particularly efficient in detecting HBV genomes with multiple large in-frame deletions and spliced variants concomitantly with non-deleted parental genomes. However, an average-12% sequencing error rate per individual reads associated to a low throughput challenged single-nucleotide resolution, polymorphism calling and phasing mutations directly from the sequencing reads. Despite this high error rate, the pairwise identity of MinION HBV consensus genome was consistent with Sanger sequencing method. MinION being under continuous development, further studies are needed to evaluate its potential use for viral infection characterization.
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spelling pubmed-58640092018-03-28 Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples Sauvage, Virginie Boizeau, Laure Candotti, Daniel Vandenbogaert, Mathias Servant-Delmas, Annabelle Caro, Valérie Laperche, Syria PLoS One Research Article Until recently, the method of choice to characterize viral diversity consisted in cloning PCR amplicons of full-length viral genomes and Sanger-sequencing of multiple clones. However, this is extremely laborious, time-consuming, and low-throughput. Next generation short-read sequencing appears also limited by its inability to directly sequence full-length viral genomes. The MinION(™) device recently developed by Oxford Nanopore Technologies can be a promising alternative by applying long-read single-molecule sequencing directly to the overall amplified products generated in a PCR reaction. This new technology was evaluated by using hepatitis B virus (HBV) as a model. Several previously characterized HBV-infected clinical samples were investigated including recombinant virus, variants that harbored deletions and mixed population. Original MinION device was able to generate individual complete 3,200-nt HBV genome sequences and to identify recombinant variants. MinION was particularly efficient in detecting HBV genomes with multiple large in-frame deletions and spliced variants concomitantly with non-deleted parental genomes. However, an average-12% sequencing error rate per individual reads associated to a low throughput challenged single-nucleotide resolution, polymorphism calling and phasing mutations directly from the sequencing reads. Despite this high error rate, the pairwise identity of MinION HBV consensus genome was consistent with Sanger sequencing method. MinION being under continuous development, further studies are needed to evaluate its potential use for viral infection characterization. Public Library of Science 2018-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5864009/ /pubmed/29566006 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194366 Text en © 2018 Sauvage 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
Sauvage, Virginie
Boizeau, Laure
Candotti, Daniel
Vandenbogaert, Mathias
Servant-Delmas, Annabelle
Caro, Valérie
Laperche, Syria
Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
title Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
title_full Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
title_fullStr Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
title_full_unstemmed Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
title_short Early MinION(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis B virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
title_sort early minion(™) nanopore single-molecule sequencing technology enables the characterization of hepatitis b virus genetic complexity in clinical samples
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5864009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29566006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194366
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