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An Improved Barcoded Oligonucleotide Primers-based Next-generation Sequencing Approach for Direct Identification of Viral Pathogens in Clinical Specimens

Authors :
WANG, Chun Hua
NIE, Kai
ZHANG, Yi
WANG, Ji
ZHOU, Shuai Feng
LI, Xin Na
ZHOU, Hang Yu
QI, Shun Xiang
MA, Xue Jun
Source :
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
The Editorial Board of Biomedical and Environmental Sciences. Published by Elsevier (Singapore) Pte Ltd., 2017.

Abstract

Objective To provide a feasible and cost-effective next-generation sequencing (NGS) method for accurate identification of viral pathogens in clinical specimens, because enormous limitations impede the clinical use of common NGS, such as high cost, complicated procedures, tremendous data analysis, and high background noise in clinical samples. Methods Viruses from cell culture materials or clinical specimens were identified following an improved NGS procedure: reduction of background noise by sample preprocessing, viral enrichment by barcoded oligonucleotide (random hexamer or non-ribosomal hexanucleotide) primer-based amplification, fragmentation-free library construction and sequencing of one-tube mixtures, as well as rapid data analysis using an in-house pipeline. Results NGS data demonstrated that both barcoded primer sets were useful to simultaneously capture multiple viral pathogens in cell culture materials or clinical specimens and verified that hexanucleotide primers captured as many viral sequences as hexamers did. Moreover, direct testing of clinical specimens using this improved hexanucleotide primer-based NGS approach provided further detailed genotypes of enteroviruses causing hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) and identified other potential viruses or differentiated misdiagnosis events. Conclusion The improved barcoded oligonucleotide primer-based NGS approach is simplified, time saving, cost effective, and appropriate for direct identification of viral pathogens in clinical practice.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22140190 and 08953988
Volume :
30
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........9ae380d4608a5537b437c75cfebc7227