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Guidelines for the reliable use of high throughput sequencing technologies to detect plant pathogens and pests

Authors :
Sebastien Massart
Ian Adams
Maher Al Rwahnih
Steve Baeyen
Guillaume J. Bilodeau
Arnaud G. Blouin
Neil Boonham
Thierry Candresse
Anne Chandellier
Kris De Jonghe
Adrian Fox
Yahya Z.A. Gaafar
Pascal Gentit
Annelies Haegeman
Wellcome Ho
Oscar Hurtado-Gonzales
Wilfried Jonkers
Jan Kreuze
Denis Kutjnak
Blanca B. Landa
Mingxin Liu
François Maclot
Marta Malapi-Wight
Hans J. Maree
Francesco Martoni
Natasa Mehle
Angelantonio Minafra
Dimitre Mollov
Adriana G. Moreira
Mark Nakhla
Françoise Petter
Alexander M. Piper
Julien P. Ponchart
Robbie Rae
Benoit Remenant
Yazmin Rivera
Brendan Rodoni
Marleen Botermans
J.W. Roenhorst
Johan Rollin
Pasquale Saldarelli
Johanna Santala
Rose Souza-Richards
Davide Spadaro
David J. Studholme
Stefanie Sultmanis
René van der Vlugt
Lucie Tamisier
Charlotte Trontin
Ines Vazquez-Iglesias
Claudia S.L. Vicente
Bart T.L.H. van de Vossenberg
Marcel Westenberg
Thierry Wetzel
Heiko Ziebell
Benedicte S. M. Lebas
Source :
Peer Community Journal 2 (2022), Peer Community Journal, 2
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Peer Community In, 2022.

Abstract

High-throughput sequencing (HTS) technologies have the potential to become one of the most significant advances in molecular diagnostics. Their use by researchers to detect and characterize plant pathogens and pests has been growing steadily for more than a decade and they are now envisioned as a routine diagnostic test to be deployed by plant pest diagnostics laboratories. Nevertheless, HTS technologies and downstream bioinformatics analysis of the generated datasets represent a complex process including many steps whose reliability must be ensured. The aim of the present guidelines is to provide recommendations for researchers and diagnosticians aiming to reliably use HTS technologies to detect plant pathogens and pests. These guidelines are generic and do not depend on the sequencing technology or platform. They cover all the adoption processes of HTS technologies from test selection to test validation as well as their routine implementation. A special emphasis is given to key elements to be considered: undertaking a risk analysis, designing sample panels for validation, using proper controls, evaluating performance criteria, confirming and interpreting results. These guidelines cover any HTS test used for the detection and identification of any plant pest (viroid, virus, bacteria, phytoplasma, mycetes, nematodes, arthropods, plants) from any type of matrix. Overall, their adoption by diagnosticians and researchers should greatly improve the reliability of pathogens and pest diagnostics and foster the use of HTS technologies in plant health.<br />Scientific publication adapted from the deliverable 2.2 of the Valitest project - www.valitest.eu

Details

ISSN :
28043871
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Peer Community Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07941d5173c22e588895f604ab7ff240
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.24072/pcjournal.181