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Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses

Defining genetic diversity of viral infections directly from patient specimens is the ultimate goal of surveillance. Simple tools that can provide full-length sequence information on blood borne viral hepatitis viruses: hepatitis C, hepatitis B and hepatitis D viruses (HCV, HBV and HDV) remain elusi...

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Autores principales: Berg, Michael G., Olivo, Ana, Forberg, Kenn, Harris, Barbara J., Yamaguchi, Julie, Shirazi, Rachel, Gozlan, Yael, Sauleda, Silvia, Kaptue, Lazare, Rodgers, Mary A., Mor, Orna, Cloherty, Gavin A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7367454/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32678844
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236046
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author Berg, Michael G.
Olivo, Ana
Forberg, Kenn
Harris, Barbara J.
Yamaguchi, Julie
Shirazi, Rachel
Gozlan, Yael
Sauleda, Silvia
Kaptue, Lazare
Rodgers, Mary A.
Mor, Orna
Cloherty, Gavin A.
author_facet Berg, Michael G.
Olivo, Ana
Forberg, Kenn
Harris, Barbara J.
Yamaguchi, Julie
Shirazi, Rachel
Gozlan, Yael
Sauleda, Silvia
Kaptue, Lazare
Rodgers, Mary A.
Mor, Orna
Cloherty, Gavin A.
author_sort Berg, Michael G.
collection PubMed
description Defining genetic diversity of viral infections directly from patient specimens is the ultimate goal of surveillance. Simple tools that can provide full-length sequence information on blood borne viral hepatitis viruses: hepatitis C, hepatitis B and hepatitis D viruses (HCV, HBV and HDV) remain elusive. Here, an unbiased metagenomic next generation sequencing approach (mNGS) was used for molecular characterization of HCV infections (n = 99) from Israel which yielded full-length HCV sequences in 89% of samples, with 7 partial sequences sufficient for classification. HCV genotypes were primarily 1b (68%) and 1a (19%), with minor representation of genotypes 2c (1%) and 3a (8%). HBV/HDV coinfections were characterized by suppressed HBV viral loads, resulting in sparse mNGS coverage. A probe-based enrichment approach (xGen) aiming to increase HBV and HDV coverage was validated on a panel of diverse genotypes, geography and titers. The method extended HBV genome coverage a median 61% (range 8–84%) and provided orders of magnitude boosts in reads and sequence depth for both viruses. When HBV-xGen was applied to Israeli samples, coverage was improved by 28–73% in 4 samples and identified HBV genotype A1, A2, D1 specimens and a dual B/D infection. Abundant HDV reads in mNGS libraries yielded 18/26 (69%) full genomes and 8 partial sequences, with HDV-xGen only providing minimal extension (3–11%) of what were all genotype 1 genomes. Advanced molecular approaches coupled to virus-specific capture probes promise to enhance surveillance of viral infections and aid in monitoring the spread of local subtypes.
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spelling pubmed-73674542020-08-05 Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses Berg, Michael G. Olivo, Ana Forberg, Kenn Harris, Barbara J. Yamaguchi, Julie Shirazi, Rachel Gozlan, Yael Sauleda, Silvia Kaptue, Lazare Rodgers, Mary A. Mor, Orna Cloherty, Gavin A. PLoS One Research Article Defining genetic diversity of viral infections directly from patient specimens is the ultimate goal of surveillance. Simple tools that can provide full-length sequence information on blood borne viral hepatitis viruses: hepatitis C, hepatitis B and hepatitis D viruses (HCV, HBV and HDV) remain elusive. Here, an unbiased metagenomic next generation sequencing approach (mNGS) was used for molecular characterization of HCV infections (n = 99) from Israel which yielded full-length HCV sequences in 89% of samples, with 7 partial sequences sufficient for classification. HCV genotypes were primarily 1b (68%) and 1a (19%), with minor representation of genotypes 2c (1%) and 3a (8%). HBV/HDV coinfections were characterized by suppressed HBV viral loads, resulting in sparse mNGS coverage. A probe-based enrichment approach (xGen) aiming to increase HBV and HDV coverage was validated on a panel of diverse genotypes, geography and titers. The method extended HBV genome coverage a median 61% (range 8–84%) and provided orders of magnitude boosts in reads and sequence depth for both viruses. When HBV-xGen was applied to Israeli samples, coverage was improved by 28–73% in 4 samples and identified HBV genotype A1, A2, D1 specimens and a dual B/D infection. Abundant HDV reads in mNGS libraries yielded 18/26 (69%) full genomes and 8 partial sequences, with HDV-xGen only providing minimal extension (3–11%) of what were all genotype 1 genomes. Advanced molecular approaches coupled to virus-specific capture probes promise to enhance surveillance of viral infections and aid in monitoring the spread of local subtypes. Public Library of Science 2020-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7367454/ /pubmed/32678844 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236046 Text en © 2020 Berg 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
Berg, Michael G.
Olivo, Ana
Forberg, Kenn
Harris, Barbara J.
Yamaguchi, Julie
Shirazi, Rachel
Gozlan, Yael
Sauleda, Silvia
Kaptue, Lazare
Rodgers, Mary A.
Mor, Orna
Cloherty, Gavin A.
Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
title Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
title_full Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
title_fullStr Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
title_full_unstemmed Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
title_short Advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
title_sort advanced molecular surveillance approaches for characterization of blood borne hepatitis viruses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7367454/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32678844
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236046
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