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Fragment Ends of Circulating Microbial DNA as Signatures for Pathogen Detection in Sepsis.

Authors :
Wang G
Lam WKJ
Ling L
Ma ML
Ramakrishnan S
Chan DCT
Lee WS
Cheng SH
Chan RWY
Yu SCY
Tse IOL
Wong WT
Jiang P
Chiu RWK
Allen Chan KC
Lo YMD
Source :
Clinical chemistry [Clin Chem] 2023 Feb 01; Vol. 69 (2), pp. 189-201.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Nuclear-derived cell-free DNA (cfDNA) molecules in blood plasma are nonrandomly fragmented, bearing a wealth of information related to tissues of origin. DNASE1L3 (deoxyribonuclease 1 like 3) is an important player in shaping the fragmentation of nuclear-derived cfDNA molecules, preferentially generating molecules with 5 CC dinucleotide termini (i.e., 5 CC-end motif). However, the fragment end properties of microbial cfDNA and its clinical implication remain to be explored.<br />Methods: We performed end motif analysis on microbial cfDNA fragments in plasma samples from patients with sepsis. A sequence context-based normalization method was used to minimize the potential biases for end motif analysis.<br />Results: The end motif profiles of microbial cfDNA appeared to resemble that of nuclear cfDNA (Spearman correlation coefficient: 0.82, P value 0.001). The CC-end motif was the most preferred end motif in microbial cfDNA, suggesting that DNASE1L3 might also play a role in the fragmentation of microbe-derived cfDNA in plasma. Of note, differential end motifs were present between microbial cfDNA originating from infection-causing pathogens (enriched at the CC-end) and contaminating microbial DNA potentially derived from reagents or the environment (nearly random). The use of fragment end signatures allowed differentiation between confirmed pathogens and contaminating microbes, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.99. The performance appeared to be superior to conventional analysis based on microbial cfDNA abundance alone.<br />Conclusions: The use of fragmentomic features could facilitate the differentiation of underlying contaminating microbes from true pathogens in sepsis. This work demonstrates the potential usefulness of microbial cfDNA fragmentomics in metagenomics analysis.<br /> (© American Association for Clinical Chemistry 2022.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1530-8561
Volume :
69
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36576350
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/hvac197