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Development of an amplicon-based sequencing approach in response to the global emergence of human monkeypox virus.

Authors :
Chen NFG
Chaguza C
Gagne L
Doucette M
Smole S
Buzby E
Hall J
Ash S
Harrington R
Cofsky S
Clancy S
Kapsak CJ
Sevinsky J
Libuit K
Park DJ
Hemarajata P
Garrigues JM
Green NM
Sierra-Patev S
Carpenter-Azevedo K
Huard RC
Pearson C
Incekara K
Nishimura C
Huang JP
Gagnon E
Reever E
Razeq J
Muyombwe A
Borges V
Ferreira R
Sobral D
Duarte S
Santos D
Vieira L
Gomes JP
Aquino C
Savino IM
Felton K
Bajwa M
Hayward N
Miller H
Naumann A
Allman R
Greer N
Fall A
Mostafa HH
McHugh MP
Maloney DM
Dewar R
Kenicer J
Parker A
Mathers K
Wild J
Cotton S
Templeton KE
Churchwell G
Lee PA
Pedrosa M
McGruder B
Schmedes S
Plumb MR
Wang X
Barcellos RB
Godinho FMS
Salvato RS
Ceniseros A
Breban MI
Grubaugh ND
Gallagher GR
Vogels CBF
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2023 Jan 13. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jan 13.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The 2022 multi-country monkeypox (mpox) outbreak concurrent with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has further highlighted the need for genomic surveillance and rapid pathogen whole genome sequencing. While metagenomic sequencing approaches have been used to sequence many of the early mpox infections, these methods are resource intensive and require samples with high viral DNA concentrations. Given the atypical clinical presentation of cases associated with the outbreak and uncertainty regarding viral load across both the course of infection and anatomical body sites, there was an urgent need for a more sensitive and broadly applicable sequencing approach. Highly multiplexed amplicon-based sequencing (PrimalSeq) was initially developed for sequencing of Zika virus, and later adapted as the main sequencing approach for SARS-CoV-2. Here, we used PrimalScheme to develop a primer scheme for human monkeypox virus that can be used with many sequencing and bioinformatics pipelines implemented in public health laboratories during the COVID-19 pandemic. We sequenced clinical samples that tested presumptive positive for human monkeypox virus with amplicon-based and metagenomic sequencing approaches. We found notably higher genome coverage across the virus genome, with minimal amplicon drop-outs, in using the amplicon-based sequencing approach, particularly in higher PCR cycle threshold (lower DNA titer) samples. Further testing demonstrated that Ct value correlated with the number of sequencing reads and influenced the percent genome coverage. To maximize genome coverage when resources are limited, we recommend selecting samples with a PCR cycle threshold below 31 Ct and generating 1 million sequencing reads per sample. To support national and international public health genomic surveillance efforts, we sent out primer pool aliquots to 10 laboratories across the United States, United Kingdom, Brazil, and Portugal. These public health laboratories successfully implemented the human monkeypox virus primer scheme in various amplicon sequencing workflows and with different sample types across a range of Ct values. Thus, we show that amplicon based sequencing can provide a rapidly deployable, cost-effective, and flexible approach to pathogen whole genome sequencing in response to newly emerging pathogens. Importantly, through the implementation of our primer scheme into existing SARS-CoV-2 workflows and across a range of sample types and sequencing platforms, we further demonstrate the potential of this approach for rapid outbreak response.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
36299420
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.14.22280783