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Genomic variant-identification methods may alter Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission inferences
- Source :
- Microbial Genomics, Microbial genomics, 6(8):000418, 1-16. Microbiology Society
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Microbiology Society, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Pathogen genomic data are increasingly used to characterize global and local transmission patterns of important human pathogens and to inform public health interventions. Yet, there is no current consensus on how to measure genomic variation. To test the effect of the variant-identification approach on transmission inferences for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we conducted an experiment in which five genomic epidemiology groups applied variant-identification pipelines to the same outbreak sequence data. We compared the variants identified by each group in addition to transmission and phylogenetic inferences made with each variant set. To measure the performance of commonly used variant-identification tools, we simulated an outbreak. We compared the performance of three mapping algorithms, five variant callers and two variant filters in recovering true outbreak variants. Finally, we investigated the effect of applying increasingly stringent filters on transmission inferences and phylogenies. We found that variant-calling approaches used by different groups do not recover consistent sets of variants, which can lead to conflicting transmission inferences. Further, performance in recovering true variation varied widely across approaches. While no single variant-identification approach outperforms others in both recovering true genome-wide and outbreak-level variation, variant-identification algorithms calibrated upon real sequence data or that incorporate local reassembly outperform others in recovering true pairwise differences between isolates. The choice of variant filters contributed to extensive differences across pipelines, and applying increasingly stringent filters rapidly eroded the accuracy of transmission inferences and quality of phylogenies reconstructed from outbreak variation. Commonly used approaches to identify M. tuberculosis genomic variation have variable performance, particularly when predicting potential transmission links from pairwise genetic distances. Phylogenetic reconstruction may be improved by less stringent variant filtering. Approaches that improve variant identification in repetitive, hypervariable regions, such as long-read assemblies, may improve transmission inference.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Computer science
030106 microbiology
Inference
Computational biology
Variation (game tree)
genomic epidemiology
law.invention
Disease Outbreaks
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
03 medical and health sciences
law
Germany
Humans
variant identification
pathogen genomics
Phylogenetic tree
biology
transmission
General Medicine
Genomics
biology.organism_classification
Variable (computer science)
Identification (information)
030104 developmental biology
Transmission (mechanics)
Genomic Methodologies: Genome variation detection
tuberculosis
Pairwise comparison
Algorithms
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20575858
- Volume :
- 6
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Microbial Genomics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0c1b6ab15255a701adedf9c5231b8471