Functional Viral Metagenomics and the Development of New Enzymes for DNA and RNA Amplification and Sequencing

Author(s):  
Thomas W. Schoenfeld ◽  
Michael J. Moser ◽  
David Mead
Author(s):  
Thomas W. Schoenfeld ◽  
Nick Hermersmann ◽  
Mike Moser ◽  
Darby Renneckar ◽  
Vinay Dhodda ◽  
...  

Genes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 655 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junier ◽  
Huber ◽  
Schmutz ◽  
Kufner ◽  
Zagordi ◽  
...  

Shotgun metagenomics using next generation sequencing (NGS) is a promising technique to analyze both DNA and RNA microbial material from patient samples. Mostly used in a research setting, it is now increasingly being used in the clinical realm as well, notably to support diagnosis of viral infections, thereby calling for quality control and the implementation of ring trials (RT) to benchmark pipelines and ensure comparable results. The Swiss NGS clinical virology community therefore decided to conduct a RT in 2018, in order to benchmark current metagenomic workflows used at Swiss clinical virology laboratories, and thereby contribute to the definition of common best practices. The RT consisted of two parts (increments), in order to disentangle the variability arising from the experimental compared to the bioinformatics parts of the laboratory pipeline. In addition, the RT was also designed to assess the impact of databases compared to bioinformatics algorithms on the final results, by asking participants to perform the bioinformatics analysis with a common database, in addition to using their own in-house database. Five laboratories participated in the RT (seven pipelines were tested). We observed that the algorithms had a stronger impact on the overall performance than the choice of the reference database. Our results also suggest that differences in sample preparation can lead to significant differences in the performance, and that laboratories should aim for at least 5–10 Mio reads per sample and use depth of coverage in addition to other interpretation metrics such as the percent of coverage. Performance was generally lower when increasing the number of viruses per sample. The lessons learned from this pilot study will be useful for the development of larger-scale RTs to serve as regular quality control tests for laboratories performing NGS analyses of viruses in a clinical setting.


2003 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 512-519 ◽  
Author(s):  
John S. Lambert ◽  
D. Robert Harris ◽  
E. Richard Stiehm ◽  
John Moye, ◽  
Mary Glenn Fowler ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shreeya Agrawal ◽  
Alison Fanton ◽  
Sita S. Chandrasekaran ◽  
Noam Prywes ◽  
Maria Lukarska ◽  
...  

To combat disease outbreaks such as the COVID-19 pandemic, flexible diagnostics for rapid viral detection are greatly needed. We report a nucleic acid test that integrates distinct mechanisms of DNA and RNA amplification optimized for high sensitivity and rapid kinetics, linked to Cas13 detection for specificity. We paired this workflow, termed Diagnostics with Coronavirus Enzymatic Reporting (DISCoVER), with extraction-free sample lysis using shelf-stable reagents that are widely available at low cost. DISCoVER has been validated on saliva samples to incentivize frequent testing for more widespread community surveillance and robustly detected attomolar levels of SARS-CoV-2 within 30 minutes, while avoiding false positives in virus-negative saliva. Furthermore, DISCoVER is compatible with multiplexed CRISPR probes to enable simultaneous detection of a human gene control or alternative pathogens.


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