Back to Search Start Over

Rapid and sensitive direct detection and identification of poliovirus from stool and environmental surveillance samples using nanopore sequencing

Authors :
Manasi Majumdar
Lubna Rehman
Mehar Angez
Dilip Abraham
Nayab Mahmood
Muhammad Salman
Nicholas C. Grassly
Catherine Troman
Yasir Arshad
Shahzad Shaukat
Alexander G. Shaw
Salmaan Sharif
Ananda S Bandyopadhyay
Gagandeep Kang
Javier Martin
Adnan Khurshid
Ribqa Akthar
Yara Hajarha
Blossom Benny
Andrew Rambaut
Ghulam Mujtaba
Ira Praharaj
Muhammad Masroor Alam
Dimitra Klapsa
Humayun Asghar
Áine O'Toole
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Source :
Shaw, A G, Majumdar, M, Troman, C, O'toole, Á, Benny, B, Abraham, D, Praharaj, I, Kang, G, Sharif, S, Alam, M M, Shaukat, S, Angez, M, Khurshid, A, Mahmood, N, Arshad, Y, Rehman, L, Mujtaba, G, Akthar, R, Salman, M, Klapsa, D, Hajarha, Y, Asghar, H, Bandyopadhyay, A, Rambaut, A, Martin, J & Grassly, N 2020, ' Rapid and sensitive direct detection and identification of poliovirus from stool and environmental surveillance samples using nanopore sequencing ', Journal of Clinical Microbiology, vol. 58, no. 9, e00920-20 . https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00920-20, Journal of Clinical Microbiology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Global poliovirus surveillance involves virus isolation from stool and environmental samples, intratypic differential (ITD) by PCR, and sequencing of the VP1 region to distinguish vaccine (Sabin), vaccine-derived, and wild-type polioviruses and to ensure an appropriate response. This cell culture algorithm takes 2 to 3 weeks on average between sample receipt and sequencing. Direct detection of viral RNA using PCR allows faster detection but has traditionally faced challenges related to poor sensitivity and difficulties in sequencing common samples containing poliovirus and enterovirus mixtures.<br />Global poliovirus surveillance involves virus isolation from stool and environmental samples, intratypic differential (ITD) by PCR, and sequencing of the VP1 region to distinguish vaccine (Sabin), vaccine-derived, and wild-type polioviruses and to ensure an appropriate response. This cell culture algorithm takes 2 to 3 weeks on average between sample receipt and sequencing. Direct detection of viral RNA using PCR allows faster detection but has traditionally faced challenges related to poor sensitivity and difficulties in sequencing common samples containing poliovirus and enterovirus mixtures. We present a nested PCR and nanopore sequencing protocol that allows rapid (99.9%. This novel method shows promise as a faster and safer alternative to cell culture for the detection and real-time sequencing of polioviruses in stool and environmental samples.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Shaw, A G, Majumdar, M, Troman, C, O'toole, Á, Benny, B, Abraham, D, Praharaj, I, Kang, G, Sharif, S, Alam, M M, Shaukat, S, Angez, M, Khurshid, A, Mahmood, N, Arshad, Y, Rehman, L, Mujtaba, G, Akthar, R, Salman, M, Klapsa, D, Hajarha, Y, Asghar, H, Bandyopadhyay, A, Rambaut, A, Martin, J & Grassly, N 2020, ' Rapid and sensitive direct detection and identification of poliovirus from stool and environmental surveillance samples using nanopore sequencing ', Journal of Clinical Microbiology, vol. 58, no. 9, e00920-20 . https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00920-20, Journal of Clinical Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....50562869802b9270b59d490cc49d7971
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.27.053421