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Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding

Indian fruit bats, flying fox Pteropus medius was identified as an asymptomatic natural host of recently emerged Nipah virus, which is known to induce a severe infectious disease in humans. The absence of P. medius genome sequence presents an important obstacle for further studies of virus–host inte...

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Autores principales: Fouret, Julien, Brunet, Frédéric G., Binet, Martin, Aurine, Noémie, Enchéry, Francois, Croze, Séverine, Guinier, Marie, Goumaidi, Abdelghafar, Preininger, Doris, Volff, Jean-Nicolas, Bailly-Bechet, Marc, Lachuer, Joël, Horvat, Branka, Legras-Lachuer, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7403528/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32849415
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.01807
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author Fouret, Julien
Brunet, Frédéric G.
Binet, Martin
Aurine, Noémie
Enchéry, Francois
Croze, Séverine
Guinier, Marie
Goumaidi, Abdelghafar
Preininger, Doris
Volff, Jean-Nicolas
Bailly-Bechet, Marc
Lachuer, Joël
Horvat, Branka
Legras-Lachuer, Catherine
author_facet Fouret, Julien
Brunet, Frédéric G.
Binet, Martin
Aurine, Noémie
Enchéry, Francois
Croze, Séverine
Guinier, Marie
Goumaidi, Abdelghafar
Preininger, Doris
Volff, Jean-Nicolas
Bailly-Bechet, Marc
Lachuer, Joël
Horvat, Branka
Legras-Lachuer, Catherine
author_sort Fouret, Julien
collection PubMed
description Indian fruit bats, flying fox Pteropus medius was identified as an asymptomatic natural host of recently emerged Nipah virus, which is known to induce a severe infectious disease in humans. The absence of P. medius genome sequence presents an important obstacle for further studies of virus–host interactions and better understanding of mechanisms of zoonotic viral emergence. Generation of the high-quality genome sequence is often linked to a considerable effort associated to elevated costs. Although secondary scaffolding methods have reduced sequencing expenses, they imply the development of new tools for the integration of different data sources to achieve more reliable sequencing results. We initially sequenced the P. medius genome using the combination of Illumina paired-end and Nanopore sequencing, with a depth of 57.4x and 6.1x, respectively. Then, we introduced the novel scaff2link software to integrate multiple sources of information for secondary scaffolding, allowing to remove the association with discordant information among two sources. Different quality metrics were next produced to validate the benefits from secondary scaffolding. The P. medius genome, assembled by this method, has a length of 1,985 Mb and consists of 33,613 contigs and 16,113 scaffolds with an NG50 of 19 Mb. At least 22.5% of the assembled sequences is covered by interspersed repeats already described in other species and 19,823 coding genes are annotated. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated the clustering of P. medius genome with two other Pteropus bat species, P. alecto and P. vampyrus, for which genome sequences are currently available. SARS-CoV entry receptor ACE2 sequence of P. medius was 82.7% identical with ACE2 of Rhinolophus sinicus bats, thought to be the natural host of SARS-CoV. Altogether, our results confirm that a lower depth of sequencing is enough to obtain a valuable genome sequence, using secondary scaffolding approaches and demonstrate the benefits of the scaff2link application. The genome sequence is now available to the scientific community to (i) proceed with further genomic analysis of P. medius, (ii) to characterize the underlying mechanism allowing Nipah virus maintenance and perpetuation in its bat host, and (iii) to monitor their evolutionary pathways toward a better understanding of bats’ ability to control viral infections.
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spelling pubmed-74035282020-08-25 Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding Fouret, Julien Brunet, Frédéric G. Binet, Martin Aurine, Noémie Enchéry, Francois Croze, Séverine Guinier, Marie Goumaidi, Abdelghafar Preininger, Doris Volff, Jean-Nicolas Bailly-Bechet, Marc Lachuer, Joël Horvat, Branka Legras-Lachuer, Catherine Front Microbiol Microbiology Indian fruit bats, flying fox Pteropus medius was identified as an asymptomatic natural host of recently emerged Nipah virus, which is known to induce a severe infectious disease in humans. The absence of P. medius genome sequence presents an important obstacle for further studies of virus–host interactions and better understanding of mechanisms of zoonotic viral emergence. Generation of the high-quality genome sequence is often linked to a considerable effort associated to elevated costs. Although secondary scaffolding methods have reduced sequencing expenses, they imply the development of new tools for the integration of different data sources to achieve more reliable sequencing results. We initially sequenced the P. medius genome using the combination of Illumina paired-end and Nanopore sequencing, with a depth of 57.4x and 6.1x, respectively. Then, we introduced the novel scaff2link software to integrate multiple sources of information for secondary scaffolding, allowing to remove the association with discordant information among two sources. Different quality metrics were next produced to validate the benefits from secondary scaffolding. The P. medius genome, assembled by this method, has a length of 1,985 Mb and consists of 33,613 contigs and 16,113 scaffolds with an NG50 of 19 Mb. At least 22.5% of the assembled sequences is covered by interspersed repeats already described in other species and 19,823 coding genes are annotated. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated the clustering of P. medius genome with two other Pteropus bat species, P. alecto and P. vampyrus, for which genome sequences are currently available. SARS-CoV entry receptor ACE2 sequence of P. medius was 82.7% identical with ACE2 of Rhinolophus sinicus bats, thought to be the natural host of SARS-CoV. Altogether, our results confirm that a lower depth of sequencing is enough to obtain a valuable genome sequence, using secondary scaffolding approaches and demonstrate the benefits of the scaff2link application. The genome sequence is now available to the scientific community to (i) proceed with further genomic analysis of P. medius, (ii) to characterize the underlying mechanism allowing Nipah virus maintenance and perpetuation in its bat host, and (iii) to monitor their evolutionary pathways toward a better understanding of bats’ ability to control viral infections. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7403528/ /pubmed/32849415 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.01807 Text en Copyright © 2020 Fouret, Brunet, Binet, Aurine, Enchéry, Croze, Guinier, Goumaidi, Preininger, Volff, Bailly-Bechet, Lachuer, Horvat and Legras-Lachuer. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Fouret, Julien
Brunet, Frédéric G.
Binet, Martin
Aurine, Noémie
Enchéry, Francois
Croze, Séverine
Guinier, Marie
Goumaidi, Abdelghafar
Preininger, Doris
Volff, Jean-Nicolas
Bailly-Bechet, Marc
Lachuer, Joël
Horvat, Branka
Legras-Lachuer, Catherine
Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding
title Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding
title_full Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding
title_fullStr Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding
title_full_unstemmed Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding
title_short Sequencing the Genome of Indian Flying Fox, Natural Reservoir of Nipah Virus, Using Hybrid Assembly and Conservative Secondary Scaffolding
title_sort sequencing the genome of indian flying fox, natural reservoir of nipah virus, using hybrid assembly and conservative secondary scaffolding
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7403528/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32849415
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.01807
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