scholarly journals Closed Genome Sequences of 28 Foodborne Pathogens from the CFSAN Verification Set, Determined by a Combination of Long and Short Reads

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (18) ◽  
Author(s):  
Narjol Gonzalez-Escalona ◽  
George John Kastanis ◽  
Ruth Timme ◽  
Dwayne Roberson ◽  
Maria Balkey ◽  
...  

Foodborne pathogens have been implicated in illnesses worldwide. Here, we report the complete closed genome sequences of 28 bacterial strains belonging to 18 different species. These genomes belong to known foodborne pathogens. The genomes were closed by a combination of long-read and short-read sequencing.

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (28) ◽  
Author(s):  
Narjol Gonzalez-Escalona ◽  
J. R. Aguirre-Sánchez ◽  
J. R. Ibarra-Rodríguez ◽  
C. Chaidez-Quiroz ◽  
Jaime Martinez-Urtaza

Here, we report the genome sequences of three Salmonella enterica strains belonging to serovars Weltevreden (CFSAN047349), Saintpaul (CFSAN047351), and Thompson (CFSAN047352), isolated from river water in Sinaloa, Mexico. The genomes were closed by a combination of long-read and short-read sequencing. The strain sequence types (STs) are ST365, ST50, and ST26, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (28) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhihui Yang ◽  
Mark Mammel ◽  
Samantha Q. Wales

High-throughput sequencing is one of the approaches used for the detection of foodborne pathogens such as noroviruses. Long-read sequencing has advantages over short-read sequencing in speed, read length, and lower fragmentation bias, which makes it a potential powerful tool for the fast detection and identification of viruses.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Guillaume Emond-Rheault ◽  
Jérémie Hamel ◽  
Julie Jeukens ◽  
Luca Freschi ◽  
Irena Kukavica-Ibrulj ◽  
...  

The emergence of multidrug-resistant bacterial strains worldwide has become a serious problem for public health over recent decades. The increase in antimicrobial resistance has been expanding via plasmids as mobile genetic elements encoding antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes that are transferred vertically and horizontally. This study focuses on Salmonella enterica, one of the leading foodborne pathogens in industrialized countries. S. enterica is known to carry several plasmids involved not only in virulence but also in AMR. In the current paper, we present an integrated strategy to detect plasmid scaffolds in whole genome sequencing (WGS) assemblies. We developed a two-step procedure to predict plasmids based on i) the presence of essential elements for plasmid replication and mobility, as well as ii) sequence similarity to a reference plasmid. Next, to confirm the accuracy of the prediction in 1750 S. enterica short-read sequencing data, we combined Oxford Nanopore MinION long-read sequencing with Illumina MiSeq short-read sequencing in hybrid assemblies for 84 isolates to evaluate the proportion of plasmid that has been detected. At least one scaffold with an origin of replication (ORI) was predicted in 61.3% of the Salmonella isolates tested. The results indicated that IncFII and IncI1 ORIs were distributed in many S. enterica serotypes and were the most prevalent AMR genes carrier, whereas IncHI2A/IncHI2 and IncA/C2 were more serotype restricted but bore several AMR genes. Comparison between hybrid and short-read assemblies revealed that 81.1% of plasmids were found in the short-read sequencing using our pipeline. Through this process, we established that plasmids are prevalent in S. enterica and we also substantially expand the AMR genes in the resistome of this species.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Narjol Gonzalez-Escalona ◽  
Julie Haendiges ◽  
Jesse D. Miller ◽  
Shashi K. Sharma

Here we report the genome sequences of two toxin-producing Clostridium botuli num strains, one environmental sample (83F) and one clinical sample (CDC51232). The genomes were closed by a combination of long-read and short-read sequencing.


BMC Genomics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth Commichaux ◽  
Kiran Javkar ◽  
Padmini Ramachandran ◽  
Niranjan Nagarajan ◽  
Denis Bertrand ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Whole genome sequencing of cultured pathogens is the state of the art public health response for the bioinformatic source tracking of illness outbreaks. Quasimetagenomics can substantially reduce the amount of culturing needed before a high quality genome can be recovered. Highly accurate short read data is analyzed for single nucleotide polymorphisms and multi-locus sequence types to differentiate strains but cannot span many genomic repeats, resulting in highly fragmented assemblies. Long reads can span repeats, resulting in much more contiguous assemblies, but have lower accuracy than short reads. Results We evaluated the accuracy of Listeria monocytogenes assemblies from enrichments (quasimetagenomes) of naturally-contaminated ice cream using long read (Oxford Nanopore) and short read (Illumina) sequencing data. Accuracy of ten assembly approaches, over a range of sequencing depths, was evaluated by comparing sequence similarity of genes in assemblies to a complete reference genome. Long read assemblies reconstructed a circularized genome as well as a 71 kbp plasmid after 24 h of enrichment; however, high error rates prevented high fidelity gene assembly, even at 150X depth of coverage. Short read assemblies accurately reconstructed the core genes after 28 h of enrichment but produced highly fragmented genomes. Hybrid approaches demonstrated promising results but had biases based upon the initial assembly strategy. Short read assemblies scaffolded with long reads accurately assembled the core genes after just 24 h of enrichment, but were highly fragmented. Long read assemblies polished with short reads reconstructed a circularized genome and plasmid and assembled all the genes after 24 h enrichment but with less fidelity for the core genes than the short read assemblies. Conclusion The integration of long and short read sequencing of quasimetagenomes expedited the reconstruction of a high quality pathogen genome compared to either platform alone. A new and more complete level of information about genome structure, gene order and mobile elements can be added to the public health response by incorporating long read analyses with the standard short read WGS outbreak response.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentin Waschulin ◽  
Chiara Borsetto ◽  
Robert James ◽  
Kevin K. Newsham ◽  
Stefano Donadio ◽  
...  

AbstractThe growing problem of antibiotic resistance has led to the exploration of uncultured bacteria as potential sources of new antimicrobials. PCR amplicon analyses and short-read sequencing studies of samples from different environments have reported evidence of high biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) diversity in metagenomes, indicating their potential for producing novel and useful compounds. However, recovering full-length BGC sequences from uncultivated bacteria remains a challenge due to the technological restraints of short-read sequencing, thus making assessment of BGC diversity difficult. Here, long-read sequencing and genome mining were used to recover >1400 mostly full-length BGCs that demonstrate the rich diversity of BGCs from uncultivated lineages present in soil from Mars Oasis, Antarctica. A large number of highly divergent BGCs were not only found in the phyla Acidobacteriota, Verrucomicrobiota and Gemmatimonadota but also in the actinobacterial classes Acidimicrobiia and Thermoleophilia and the gammaproteobacterial order UBA7966. The latter furthermore contained a potential novel family of RiPPs. Our findings underline the biosynthetic potential of underexplored phyla as well as unexplored lineages within seemingly well-studied producer phyla. They also showcase long-read metagenomic sequencing as a promising way to access the untapped genetic reservoir of specialised metabolite gene clusters of the uncultured majority of microbes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Håkon Kaspersen ◽  
Thomas H. A. Haverkamp ◽  
Hanna Karin Ilag ◽  
Øivind Øines ◽  
Camilla Sekse ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT In total, 12 quinolone-resistant Escherichia coli (QREC) strains containing qnrS1 were submitted to long-read sequencing using a FLO-MIN106 flow cell on a MinION device. The long reads were assembled with short reads (Illumina) and analyzed using the MOB-suite pipeline. Six of these QREC genome sequences were closed after hybrid assembly.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Page ◽  
Nabil-Fareed Alikhan ◽  
Michael Strinden ◽  
Thanh Le Viet ◽  
Timofey Skvortsov

AbstractSpoligotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis provides a subspecies classification of this major human pathogen. Spoligotypes can be predicted from short read genome sequencing data; however, no methods exist for long read sequence data such as from Nanopore or PacBio. We present a novel software package Galru, which can rapidly detect the spoligotype of a Mycobacterium tuberculosis sample from as little as a single uncorrected long read. It allows for near real-time spoligotyping from long read data as it is being sequenced, giving rapid sample typing. We compare it to the existing state of the art software and find it performs identically to the results obtained from short read sequencing data. Galru is freely available from https://github.com/quadram-institute-bioscience/galru under the GPLv3 open source licence.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (23) ◽  
Author(s):  
Narjol González-Escalona ◽  
Kuan Yao ◽  
Maria Hoffmann

Here we report the genome sequence of Salmonella enterica serovar Richmond strain CFSAN000191, isolated from tilapia from Thailand in 2005. The genome was determined by a combination of long-read and short-read sequencing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (34) ◽  
Author(s):  
Natsuki Tomariguchi ◽  
Kentaro Miyazaki

Rubrobacter xylanophilus strain AA3-22, belonging to the phylum Actinobacteria, was isolated from nonvolcanic Arima Onsen (hot spring) in Japan. Here, we report the complete genome sequence of this organism, which was obtained by combining Oxford Nanopore long-read and Illumina short-read sequencing data.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document