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Phylodynamic Inference of Bacterial Outbreak Parameters Using Nanopore Sequencing

Authors :
Eike Steinig
Sebastián Duchêne
Izzard Aglua
Andrew Greenhill
Rebecca Ford
Mition Yoannes
Jan Jaworski
Jimmy Drekore
Bohu Urakoko
Harry Poka
Clive Wurr
Eri Ebos
David Nangen
Laurens Manning
Moses Laman
Cadhla Firth
Simon Smith
William Pomat
Steven Y C Tong
Lachlan Coin
Emma McBryde
Paul Horwood
Source :
Molecular biology and evolution. 39(3)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Nanopore sequencing and phylodynamic modeling have been used to reconstruct the transmission dynamics of viral epidemics, but their application to bacterial pathogens has remained challenging. Cost-effective bacterial genome sequencing and variant calling on nanopore platforms would greatly enhance surveillance and outbreak response in communities without access to sequencing infrastructure. Here, we adapt random forest models for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) polishing developed by Sanderson and colleagues (2020. High precision Neisseria gonorrhoeae variant and antimicrobial resistance calling from metagenomic nanopore sequencing. Genome Res. 30(9):1354–1363) to estimate divergence and effective reproduction numbers (Re) of two methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) outbreaks from remote communities in Far North Queensland and Papua New Guinea (PNG; n = 159). Successive barcoded panels of S. aureus isolates (2 × 12 per MinION) sequenced at low coverage (>5× to 10×) provided sufficient data to accurately infer genotypes with high recall when compared with Illumina references. Random forest models achieved high resolution on ST93 outbreak sequence types (>90% accuracy and precision) and enabled phylodynamic inference of epidemiological parameters using birth–death skyline models. Our method reproduced phylogenetic topology, origin of the outbreaks, and indications of epidemic growth (Re > 1). Nextflow pipelines implement SNP polisher training, evaluation, and outbreak alignments, enabling reconstruction of within-lineage transmission dynamics for infection control of bacterial disease outbreaks on portable nanopore platforms. Our study shows that nanopore technology can be used for bacterial outbreak reconstruction at competitive costs, providing opportunities for infection control in hospitals and communities without access to sequencing infrastructure, such as in remote northern Australia and PNG.

Details

ISSN :
15371719
Volume :
39
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular biology and evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd7cd59f31090eed3d47a164d8ebccb7