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Wastewater sequencing reveals early cryptic SARS-CoV-2 variant transmission.

Authors :
Karthikeyan, Smruthi
Karthikeyan, Smruthi
Levy, Joshua I
De Hoff, Peter
Humphrey, Greg
Birmingham, Amanda
Jepsen, Kristen
Farmer, Sawyer
Tubb, Helena M
Valles, Tommy
Tribelhorn, Caitlin E
Tsai, Rebecca
Aigner, Stefan
Sathe, Shashank
Moshiri, Niema
Henson, Benjamin
Mark, Adam M
Hakim, Abbas
Baer, Nathan A
Barber, Tom
Belda-Ferre, Pedro
Chacón, Marisol
Cheung, Willi
Cresini, Evelyn S
Eisner, Emily R
Lastrella, Alma L
Lawrence, Elijah S
Marotz, Clarisse A
Ngo, Toan T
Ostrander, Tyler
Plascencia, Ashley
Salido, Rodolfo A
Seaver, Phoebe
Smoot, Elizabeth W
McDonald, Daniel
Neuhard, Robert M
Scioscia, Angela L
Satterlund, Alysson M
Simmons, Elizabeth H
Abelman, Dismas B
Brenner, David
Bruner, Judith C
Buckley, Anne
Ellison, Michael
Gattas, Jeffrey
Gonias, Steven L
Hale, Matt
Hawkins, Faith
Ikeda, Lydia
Jhaveri, Hemlata
Johnson, Ted
Kellen, Vince
Kremer, Brendan
Matthews, Gary
McLawhon, Ronald W
Ouillet, Pierre
Park, Daniel
Pradenas, Allorah
Reed, Sharon
Riggs, Lindsay
Sanders, Alison
Sollenberger, Bradley
Song, Angela
White, Benjamin
Winbush, Terri
Aceves, Christine M
Anderson, Catelyn
Gangavarapu, Karthik
Hufbauer, Emory
Kurzban, Ezra
Lee, Justin
Matteson, Nathaniel L
Parker, Edyth
Perkins, Sarah A
Ramesh, Karthik S
Robles-Sikisaka, Refugio
Schwab, Madison A
Spencer, Emily
Wohl, Shirlee
Nicholson, Laura
Mchardy, Ian H
Dimmock, David P
Hobbs, Charlotte A
Bakhtar, Omid
Harding, Aaron
Mendoza, Art
Bolze, Alexandre
Becker, David
Cirulli, Elizabeth T
Isaksson, Magnus
Schiabor Barrett, Kelly M
Washington, Nicole L
Malone, John D
Schafer, Ashleigh Murphy
Gurfield, Nikos
Stous, Sarah
Fielding-Miller, Rebecca
Garfein, Richard S
Gaines, Tommi
Anderson, Cheryl
Martin, Natasha K
Karthikeyan, Smruthi
Karthikeyan, Smruthi
Levy, Joshua I
De Hoff, Peter
Humphrey, Greg
Birmingham, Amanda
Jepsen, Kristen
Farmer, Sawyer
Tubb, Helena M
Valles, Tommy
Tribelhorn, Caitlin E
Tsai, Rebecca
Aigner, Stefan
Sathe, Shashank
Moshiri, Niema
Henson, Benjamin
Mark, Adam M
Hakim, Abbas
Baer, Nathan A
Barber, Tom
Belda-Ferre, Pedro
Chacón, Marisol
Cheung, Willi
Cresini, Evelyn S
Eisner, Emily R
Lastrella, Alma L
Lawrence, Elijah S
Marotz, Clarisse A
Ngo, Toan T
Ostrander, Tyler
Plascencia, Ashley
Salido, Rodolfo A
Seaver, Phoebe
Smoot, Elizabeth W
McDonald, Daniel
Neuhard, Robert M
Scioscia, Angela L
Satterlund, Alysson M
Simmons, Elizabeth H
Abelman, Dismas B
Brenner, David
Bruner, Judith C
Buckley, Anne
Ellison, Michael
Gattas, Jeffrey
Gonias, Steven L
Hale, Matt
Hawkins, Faith
Ikeda, Lydia
Jhaveri, Hemlata
Johnson, Ted
Kellen, Vince
Kremer, Brendan
Matthews, Gary
McLawhon, Ronald W
Ouillet, Pierre
Park, Daniel
Pradenas, Allorah
Reed, Sharon
Riggs, Lindsay
Sanders, Alison
Sollenberger, Bradley
Song, Angela
White, Benjamin
Winbush, Terri
Aceves, Christine M
Anderson, Catelyn
Gangavarapu, Karthik
Hufbauer, Emory
Kurzban, Ezra
Lee, Justin
Matteson, Nathaniel L
Parker, Edyth
Perkins, Sarah A
Ramesh, Karthik S
Robles-Sikisaka, Refugio
Schwab, Madison A
Spencer, Emily
Wohl, Shirlee
Nicholson, Laura
Mchardy, Ian H
Dimmock, David P
Hobbs, Charlotte A
Bakhtar, Omid
Harding, Aaron
Mendoza, Art
Bolze, Alexandre
Becker, David
Cirulli, Elizabeth T
Isaksson, Magnus
Schiabor Barrett, Kelly M
Washington, Nicole L
Malone, John D
Schafer, Ashleigh Murphy
Gurfield, Nikos
Stous, Sarah
Fielding-Miller, Rebecca
Garfein, Richard S
Gaines, Tommi
Anderson, Cheryl
Martin, Natasha K
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

As SARS-CoV-2 continues to spread and evolve, detecting emerging variants early is critical for public health interventions. Inferring lineage prevalence by clinical testing is infeasible at scale, especially in areas with limited resources, participation, or testing/sequencing capacity, which can also introduce biases1-3. SARS-CoV-2 RNA concentration in wastewater successfully tracks regional infection dynamics and provides less biased abundance estimates than clinical testing4,5. Tracking virus genomic sequences in wastewater would improve community prevalence estimates and detect emerging variants. However, two factors limit wastewater-based genomic surveillance: low-quality sequence data and inability to estimate relative lineage abundance in mixed samples. Here, we resolve these critical issues to perform a high-resolution, 295-day wastewater and clinical sequencing effort, in the controlled environment of a large university campus and the broader context of the surrounding county. We develop and deploy improved virus concentration protocols and deconvolution software that fully resolve multiple virus strains from wastewater. We detect emerging variants of concern up to 14 days earlier in wastewater samples, and identify multiple instances of virus spread not captured by clinical genomic surveillance. Our study provides a scalable solution for wastewater genomic surveillance that allows early detection of SARS-CoV-2 variants and identification of cryptic transmission.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1341874116
Document Type :
Electronic Resource