scholarly journals E. coli NF73-1 Isolated From NASH Patients Aggravates NAFLD in Mice by Translocating Into the Liver and Stimulating M1 Polarization

Author(s):  
Yifan Zhang ◽  
Weiwei Jiang ◽  
Jun Xu ◽  
Na Wu ◽  
Yang Wang ◽  
...  

ObjectiveThe gut microbiota is associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). We isolated the Escherichia coli strain NF73-1 from the intestines of a NASH patient and then investigated its effect and underlying mechanism.Methods16S ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA) amplicon sequencing was used to detect bacterial profiles in healthy controls, NAFLD patients and NASH patients. Highly enriched E. coli strains were cultured and isolated from NASH patients. Whole-genome sequencing and comparative genomics were performed to investigate gene expression. Depending on the diet, male C57BL/6J mice were further grouped in normal diet (ND) and high-fat diet (HFD) groups. To avoid disturbing the bacterial microbiota, some of the ND and HFD mice were grouped as “bacteria-depleted” mice and treated with a cocktail of broad-spectrum antibiotic complex (ABX) from the 8th to 10th week. Then, E. coli NF73-1, the bacterial strain isolated from NASH patients, was administered transgastrically for 6 weeks to investigate its effect and mechanism in the pathogenic progression of NAFLD.ResultsThe relative abundance of Escherichia increased significantly in the mucosa of NAFLD patients, especially NASH patients. The results from whole-genome sequencing and comparative genomics showed a specific gene expression profile in E. coli strain NF73-1, which was isolated from the intestinal mucosa of NASH patients. E. coli NF73-1 accelerates NAFLD independently. Only in the HFD-NF73-1 and HFD-ABX-NF73-1 groups were EGFP-labeled E. coli NF73-1 detected in the liver and intestine. Subsequently, translocation of E. coli NF73-1 into the liver led to an increase in hepatic M1 macrophages via the TLR2/NLRP3 pathway. Hepatic M1 macrophages induced by E. coli NF73-1 activated mTOR-S6K1-SREBP-1/PPAR-α signaling, causing a metabolic switch from triglyceride oxidation toward triglyceride synthesis in NAFLD mice.ConclusionsE. coli NF73-1 is a critical trigger in the progression of NAFLD. E. coli NF73-1 might be a specific strain for NAFLD patients.

Author(s):  
Jingyi Li ◽  
Mi-Ok Lee ◽  
Brian W Davis ◽  
Ping Wu ◽  
Shu-Man Hsieh-Li ◽  
...  

Abstract The Crest mutation in chicken shows incomplete dominance and causes a spectacular phenotype in which the small feathers normally present on the head are replaced by much larger feathers normally present only in dorsal skin. Using whole genome sequencing, we show that the crest phenotype is caused by a 197 bp duplication of an evolutionarily conserved sequence located in the intron of HOXC10 on chromosome 33. A diagnostic test showed that the duplication was present in all 54 crested chickens representing eight breeds and absent from all 433 non-crested chickens representing 214 populations. The mutation causes ectopic expression of at least five closely linked HOXC genes, including HOXC10, in cranial skin of crested chickens. The result is consistent with the interpretation that the crest feathers are caused by an altered body region identity. The upregulated HOXC gene expression is expanded to skull tissue of Polish chickens showing a large crest often associated with cerebral hernia, but not in Silkie chickens characterized by a small crest, both homozygous for the duplication. Thus, the 197 bp duplication is required for the development of a large crest and susceptibility to cerebral hernia because only crested chicken show this malformation. However, this mutation is not sufficient to cause herniation because this malformation is not present in breeds with a small crest, like Silkie chickens.


PeerJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. e12446
Author(s):  
Darlene D. Wagner ◽  
Heather A. Carleton ◽  
Eija Trees ◽  
Lee S. Katz

Background Whole genome sequencing (WGS) has gained increasing importance in responses to enteric bacterial outbreaks. Common analysis procedures for WGS, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and genome assembly, are highly dependent upon WGS data quality. Methods Raw, unprocessed WGS reads from Escherichia coli, Salmonella enterica, and Shigella sonnei outbreak clusters were characterized for four quality metrics: PHRED score, read length, library insert size, and ambiguous nucleotide composition. PHRED scores were strongly correlated with improved SNPs analysis results in E. coli and S. enterica clusters. Results Assembly quality showed only moderate correlations with PHRED scores and library insert size, and then only for Salmonella. To improve SNP analyses and assemblies, we compared seven read-healing pipelines to improve these four quality metrics and to see how well they improved SNP analysis and genome assembly. The most effective read healing pipelines for SNPs analysis incorporated quality-based trimming, fixed-width trimming, or both. The Lyve-SET SNPs pipeline showed a more marked improvement than the CFSAN SNP Pipeline, but the latter performed better on raw, unhealed reads. For genome assembly, SPAdes enabled significant improvements in healed E. coli reads only, while Skesa yielded no significant improvements on healed reads. Conclusions PHRED scores will continue to be a crucial quality metric albeit not of equal impact across all types of analyses for all enteric bacteria. While trimming-based read healing performed well for SNPs analyses, different read healing approaches are likely needed for genome assembly or other, emerging WGS analysis methodologies.


Genes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 1504
Author(s):  
Frederick Adzitey ◽  
Jonathan Asante ◽  
Hezekiel M. Kumalo ◽  
Rene B. Khan ◽  
Anou M. Somboro ◽  
...  

Escherichia coli are among the most common foodborne pathogens associated with infections reported from meat sources. This study investigated the virulome, pathogenicity, stress response factors, clonal lineages, and the phylogenomic relationship of E. coli isolated from different meat sources in Ghana using whole-genome sequencing. Isolates were screened from five meat sources (beef, chevon, guinea fowl, local chicken, and mutton) and five areas (Aboabo, Central market, Nyorni, Victory cinema, and Tishegu) based in the Tamale Metropolis, Ghana. Following microbial identification, the E. coli strains were subjected to whole-genome sequencing. Comparative visualisation analyses showed different DNA synteny of the strains. The isolates consisted of diverse sequence types (STs) with the most common being ST155 (n = 3/14). Based Upon Related Sequence Types (eBURST) analyses of the study sequence types identified four similar clones, five single-locus variants, and two satellite clones (more distantly) with global curated E. coli STs. All the isolates possessed at least one restriction-modification (R-M) and CRISPR defence system. Further analysis revealed conserved stress response mechanisms (detoxification, osmotic, oxidative, and periplasmic stress) in the strains. Estimation of pathogenicity predicted a higher average probability score (Pscore ≈ 0.937), supporting their pathogenic potential to humans. Diverse virulence genes that were clonal-specific were identified. Phylogenomic tree analyses coupled with metadata insights depicted the high genetic diversity of the E. coli isolates with no correlation with their meat sources and areas. The findings of this bioinformatic analyses further our understanding of E. coli in meat sources and are broadly relevant to the design of contamination control strategies in meat retail settings in Ghana.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 68-68
Author(s):  
Jinghui Zhang ◽  
Li Ding ◽  
Linda Holmfeldt ◽  
Gang Wu ◽  
Susan L. Heatley ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 68 Early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ETP ALL) is characterized by an immature T-lineage immunophenotype (cCD3+, CD1a-, CD8- and CD5dim) aberrant expression of myeloid and stem cell markers, a distinct gene expression profile and very poor outcome. The underlying genetic basis of this form of leukemia is unknown. Here we report results of whole genome sequencing (WGS) of tumor and normal DNA from 12 children with ETP ALL. Genomes were sequenced to 30-fold haploid coverage using the Illumina GAIIx platform, and all putative somatic sequence and structural variants were validated. The frequency of mutations in 43 genes was assessed in a recurrence cohort of 52 ETP and 42 non-ETP T-ALL samples from patients enrolled in St Jude, Children's Oncology Group and AEIOP trials. Transcriptomic resequencing was performed for two WGS cases, and whole exome sequencing for three ETP ALL cases in the recurrence cohort. We identified 44 interchromosomal translocations (mean 4 per patient, range 0–12), 32 intrachromosomal translocations (mean 3, 0–7), 53 deletions (mean 4, 0–10) and 16 insertions (mean 1, 0–5). Three cases exhibited a pattern of complex rearrangements suggestive of a single cellular catastrophe (“chromothripsis”), two of which had mutations targeting mismatch and DNA repair (MLH3 and DCLRE1C). While no single chromosomal alteration was present in all cases, 10 of 12 ETP ALLs harbored chromosomal rearrangements, several of which involved complex multichromosomal translocations and resulted in the expression of chimeric in-frame novel fusion genes disrupting hematopoietic regulators, including ETV6-INO80D, NAP1L1-MLLT10, RUNX1-EVX1 and NUP214-SQSTM1, each occurring in a single case. An additional ETP case with the ETV6-INO80D fusion was identified in the recurrence cohort. Additionally, 51% of structural variants had breakpoints in genes, including those with roles in hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis, and genes also targeted by mutation in other cases (MLH3, SUZ12, RUNX1). We identified a high frequency of activating mutations in genes regulating cytokine receptor and Ras signalling in ETP ALL (67.2% of ETP compared to 19% of non-ETP T-ALL) including NRAS (17%), FLT3 (14%), JAK3 (9%), SH2B3 (or LNK; 9%), IL7R (8%), JAK1 (8%), KRAS (3%), and BRAF (2%). Seven cases (5 ETP, 2 non-ETP) harbored in frame insertion mutations in the transmembrane domain of IL7R, which were transforming when expressed in the murine cell lines, and resulted in enhanced colony formation when expressed in primary murine hematopoietic cells. The IL7R mutations resulted in constitutive Jak-Stat activation in these cell lines and primary leukemic cells expressing these mutations. Fifty-eight percent of ETP cases (compared to 17% of non-ETP cases) harbored mutations known or predicted to disrupt hematopoietic and lymphoid development, including ETV6 (33%), RUNX1 (16%), IKZF1 (14%), GATA3 (10%), EP300 (5%) and GATA2 (2%). GATA3 regulates early T cell development, and mutations in this gene were observed exclusively in ETP ALL. The mutations were commonly biallelic, and were clustered at R276, a residue critical for binding of GATA3 to DNA. Strikingly, mutations disrupting chromatin modifying genes were also highly enriched in ETP ALL. Genes encoding the the polycomb repressor complex 2 (EZH2, SUZ12 and EED), that mediates histone 3 lysine 27 (H3K27) trimethylation were deleted or mutated in 42% of ETP ALL compared to 12% of non-ETP T-ALL. In addition, alterations of the H3K36 trimethylase SETD2 were observed in 5 ETP cases, but not in non-ETP ALL. We also identified recurrent mutations in genes that have not previously been implicated in hematopoietic malignancies including RELN, DNM2, ECT2L, HNRNPA1 and HNRNPR. Using gene set enrichment analysis we demonstrate that the gene expression profile of ETP ALL shares features not only with normal human hematopoietic stem cells, but also with leukemic initiating cells (LIC) purified from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). These results indicate that mutations that drive proliferation, impair differentiation and disrupt histone modification cooperate to induce an aggressive leukemia with an aberrant immature phenotype. The similarity of the gene expression pattern with that observed in the LIC of AML raises the possibility that myeloid-directed therapies might improve the outcome of ETP ALL. Disclosures: Evans: St. Jude Children's research Hospital: Employment, Patents & Royalties; NIH & NCI: Research Funding; Aldagen: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


mSphere ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tohru Miyoshi-Akiyama ◽  
Jatan Bahadur Sherchan ◽  
Yohei Doi ◽  
Maki Nagamatsu ◽  
Jeevan B. Sherchand ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The global spread of ESBL-E. coli has been driven in large part by pandemic sequence type 131 (ST131). A recent study suggested that, within E. coli ST131, certain sublineages have disseminated worldwide with little association with their geographical origin, highlighting the complexity of the epidemiology of this pandemic clone. ST131 bacteria have also been classified into four virotypes based on the distribution of certain virulence genes. Information on virotype distribution in Asian ST131 strains is limited. We conducted whole-genome sequencing of ESBL-E. coli ST131 strains collected in Nepal and Japan, two Asian countries with a high and low prevalence of ESBL-E. coli, respectively. We systematically compared these ST131 genomes with those reported from other regions to gain insights into the molecular epidemiology of their spread and found the distinct phylogenetic characteristics of the spread of ESBL-E. coli ST131 in these two geographical areas of Asia. The global spread of extended-spectrum-β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL-E. coli) has largely been driven by the pandemic sequence type 131 (ST131). This study aimed to determine the molecular epidemiology of their spread in two Asian countries with contrasting prevalence. We conducted whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of ESBL-E. coli ST131 strains collected prospectively from Nepal and Japan, two countries in Asia with a high and low prevalence of ESBL-E. coli, respectively. We also systematically compared these genomes with those reported from other regions using publicly available WGS data for E. coli ST131 strains. Further, we conducted phylogenetic analysis of these isolates and all genome sequence data for ST131 strains to determine sequence diversity. One hundred five unique ESBL-E. coli isolates from Nepal (February 2013 to July 2013) and 76 isolates from Japan (October 2013 to September 2014) were included. Of these isolates, 54 (51%) isolates from Nepal and 11 (14%) isolates from Japan were identified as ST131 by WGS. Phylogenetic analysis based on WGS suggested that the majority of ESBL-E. coli ST131 isolates from Nepal clustered together, whereas those from Japan were more diverse. Half of the ESBL-E. coli ST131 isolates from Japan belonged to virotype C, whereas half of the isolates from Nepal belonged to a virotype other than virotype A, B, C, D, or E (A/B/C/D/E). The dominant sublineage of E. coli ST131 was H30Rx, which was most prominent in ESBL-E. coli ST131 isolates from Nepal. Our results revealed distinct phylogenetic characteristics of ESBL-E. coli ST131 spread in the two geographical areas of Asia, indicating the involvement of multiple factors in its local spread in each region. IMPORTANCE The global spread of ESBL-E. coli has been driven in large part by pandemic sequence type 131 (ST131). A recent study suggested that, within E. coli ST131, certain sublineages have disseminated worldwide with little association with their geographical origin, highlighting the complexity of the epidemiology of this pandemic clone. ST131 bacteria have also been classified into four virotypes based on the distribution of certain virulence genes. Information on virotype distribution in Asian ST131 strains is limited. We conducted whole-genome sequencing of ESBL-E. coli ST131 strains collected in Nepal and Japan, two Asian countries with a high and low prevalence of ESBL-E. coli, respectively. We systematically compared these ST131 genomes with those reported from other regions to gain insights into the molecular epidemiology of their spread and found the distinct phylogenetic characteristics of the spread of ESBL-E. coli ST131 in these two geographical areas of Asia.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 924-924
Author(s):  
Anna Stengel ◽  
Alexander Höllein ◽  
Wolfgang Kern ◽  
Manja Meggendorfer ◽  
Claudia Haferlach ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Persistent polyclonal B-cell lymphocytosis (PPBL) is a rare disorder, occurs almost exclusively in smoking women and is characterized by a chronic polyclonal lymphocytosis with circulating binucleated lymphocytes, clonal cytogenetic abnormalities involving chromosome 3, and chromosomal instability. Outcome of PPBL patients is mostly benign, but subsequent malignancies (non-Hodgkin´s lymphomas and solid tumors) were described. Potential molecular factors leading to their development are yet unclear. Aims: Detailed molecular genetic characterization of PPBL by whole genome sequencing (WGS) and RNA sequencing (RNAseq) in comparison to the well-characterized lymphoid malignancy CLL. Patient cohorts and methods: The total cohort comprised 27 PPBL (3 male, 24 female) and 250 CLL cases (163 male, 87 female). WGS was performed for all patients: 150bp paired-end reads where generated on Illumina HiseqX and NovaSeq 6000 machines (Illumina, San Diego, CA). A mixture genomic DNA from multiple anonymous donors was used as normal controls. To remove potential germline variants, each variant was queried against the gnomAD database, variants with global population frequencies >1% where excluded. Final analysis was performed only on protein-altering and splice-site variants. For further analysis, a virtual panel of 355 lymphoid genes was selected. All reported p-values are two-sided and were considered significant at p<0.05. For gene expression analysis, estimated gene counts were normalized applying Trimmed mean of M-values (TMM) normalization method and the resulting log2 counts per million (CPMs) were used as a proxy of gene expression in each sample. Genes were kept if they were expressed (> 5 CPM) in at least 66% of the samples. Genes with FDR (false discovery rate) < 0.05 and an absolute logFC > 1.5 were considered differentially expressed (DE). Results: Median age was 46 years for PPBL patients (range: 23-67 years) and 67 years for CLL patients (range: 39-94 years). Mean number of mutations per patient was 18 for PPBL and 20 for CLL. For both entities, the majority of mutations were missense mutations (88% in PPBL vs. 81% in CLL), followed by splice-site mutations (7% vs. 10%), other mutation types were only rarely detected. In PPBL, 42 genes were found to be mutated at a frequency of >15%, including ATM (22%), CREBBP (19%), NCOR2 (19%), AHNAK2 (15%), JAK3 (15%), NOTCH2 (15%) and TRAF1 (15%), all of which have been associated with a variety of cancers. Moreover, ATM, NOTCH2 and TRAF1 mutations were described before to be associated with lymphomas. In PPBL patients, mutations in TRAF1 and ATM as well as mutations in TRAF1 and NOTCH2 were found to be mutually exclusive. For CLL patients, 29 genes showed a mutation frequency of >15%, comprising ATM (26%), KMT2D (23%), NOTCH1 (23%), LRP1B (19%), TP53 (16%) and CREBBP (15%). Comparison of the mutation frequencies between the two entities revealed several genes with significant differences: whereas mutations in CKAP5 (11% vs. 2%, p=0.022), DNMT3A (11% vs. 3%, p=0.033), MAP2 (19% vs. 4%, p=0.009), ROBO1 (15% vs. 4%, p=0.046) and TRAF1 (15% vs. 2%, p=0.006) were found to be more frequent in PPBL cases compared to CLL cases, KMT2D (4% vs. 23%, p=0.014), TDRD6 (0% vs. 14%, p=0.032) and TP53 (4% vs. 16%, p=0.048) mutations were more abundantly detected in CLL patients. Moreover, NOTCH1 was mutated more frequently in CLL cases (7% vs. 23%, p=0.082), whereas mutated NOTCH2 (known to be frequently mutated in splenic marginal zone lymphoma), was more abundant in PPBL patients (15% vs. 6%, p=0.116), although both correlations were not statistically significant. Gene expression analyses by RNAseq revealed 337 genes to be differentially expressed between the entities. 207 genes were upregulated in PPBL, including PTPRK, CXCR1, BCL11B, CEPBA, CCR4 and MYC, whereas 130 genes were found to be upregulated in CLL cases, comprising ID3, BCL2, FGF2 and FLT1. Conclusions: 1) WGS analysis identifies high frequencies of cancer/lymphoma-associated gene mutations in PPBL, including mutated ATM, NOTCH2 and TRAF1. 2) Five genes showed a higher mutation frequency compared to CLL including TRAF1,DNMT3A, CKAP5 and MAP2. 3) Lymphoma associated genes (BCL11B and MYC) were overexpressed in PPBL vs CLL. 4) Taken together our results question PPBL as a benign entity and identify molecular markers that might contribute to development of subsequent malignancies. Disclosures Stengel: MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Höllein:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Kern:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment, Equity Ownership. Meggendorfer:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Haferlach:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment, Equity Ownership. Walter:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Hutter:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Haferlach:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment, Equity Ownership.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bede Constantinides ◽  
Kevin K. Chau ◽  
T. Phuong Quan ◽  
Gillian Rodger ◽  
Monique I. Andersson ◽  
...  

Escherichia coli and Klebsiella spp. are important human pathogens that cause a wide spectrum of clinical disease. In healthcare settings, sinks and other wastewater sites have been shown to be reservoirs of antimicrobial-resistant E. coli and Klebsiella spp., particularly in the context of outbreaks of resistant strains amongst patients. Without focusing exclusively on resistance markers or a clinical outbreak, we demonstrate that many hospital sink drains are abundantly and persistently colonized with diverse populations of E. coli , Klebsiella pneumoniae and Klebsiella oxytoca , including both antimicrobial-resistant and susceptible strains. Using whole-genome sequencing of 439 isolates, we show that environmental bacterial populations are largely structured by ward and sink, with only a handful of lineages, such as E. coli ST635, being widely distributed, suggesting different prevailing ecologies, which may vary as a result of different inputs and selection pressures. Whole-genome sequencing of 46 contemporaneous patient isolates identified one (2 %; 95 % CI 0.05–11 %) E. coli urine infection-associated isolate with high similarity to a prior sink isolate, suggesting that sinks may contribute to up to 10 % of infections caused by these organisms in patients on the ward over the same timeframe. Using metagenomics from 20 sink-timepoints, we show that sinks also harbour many clinically relevant antimicrobial resistance genes including bla CTX-M, bla SHV and mcr, and may act as niches for the exchange and amplification of these genes. Our study reinforces the potential role of sinks in contributing to Enterobacterales infection and antimicrobial resistance in hospital patients, something that could be amenable to intervention. This article contains data hosted by Microreact.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2810-2810
Author(s):  
Jan Egan ◽  
Jonathan J Keats ◽  
P. Leif Bergsagel ◽  
Rodger E. Tiedemann ◽  
John Carpten ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2810 Poster Board II-786 We wished to explore the genetic events associated with disease progression and development of drug resistance in multiple myeloma (MM). To do so 11 patients were studied in whom at least two (range 2-3) temporally distinct samples of tumor DNA and RNA were available. The baseline genetic initiating event was defined for all patients (3 were genetic high risk; one with t(14;16) two with t(4;14)) as well as the gene expression profile (GEP) defined risk score using the Little Rock 70 or 17 gene panel (only one, the t(14;16) was GEP defined high risk). High resolution array CGH and gene expression were then performed on each sample. Of the 8 patients with a “low risk” tumor initiating event and low risk GEP score, 6 patients had no, or only one, copy number abnormality (CNA) change between the two temporally distinct MM samples. In stark contrast the 3 genetic high risk at baseline had between 17 and 40 distinct CNA changes at the time of progression. For all 11 patients 89 CNA were acquired with progression whereas 19 previously abnormal regions disappeared suggesting clones with these abnormalities were extinguished by the therapy received. In total we detected 0-40 CNA changes between the various timepoints, median 1, mean 10.7. The acquisition of new CNA was much more common than the loss of CNA. We then focused more specifically on the t(4;14) patient with the highest number of CNA changes. This patient has a well documented clinical course of having a sustained two year VGPR to Len/dex and then progressing while still taking Len/dex. Comparison of the pre and post-Len/dex samples identified 40 CNA changes(the most of any pair studied to date). Only six CNA were shared between the two samples, which included deletions of chr4, 9, 12, 13, and X plus a t(4;14) translocation. These likely represent the initiating “driver” tumor events. The new CNA we identified originated from both remodeled genomic changes and the emergence of unique changes, indicating a new tumor clone had emerged while the previously dominant clone had regressed (e.g. a deletion of a large segment of chromosome 8 at diagnosis was no longer observed in the relapse sample). The newly acquired CNA encompassed 3968 genes (13.7% of the genes in the genome), however, only 1235 of these genes (4%) were expressed in this patient at diagnosis (1188 in the typical myeloma patient). Since 1235 genes is still a large number we hypothesized that whole genome sequencing (WGS) would help elucidate the mechanism of lenalidomide resistance. We isolated DNA from germline tissue and CD138 purified tumor cells including: diagnostic, first relapse and second relapse samples. Utilizing SOLiD (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) sequencing technology, we have completed fragment library WGS on both the germline and the final tumor samples. Quality control measures report the average number of sequence reads per start point to be less than 1.2, indicating the library is primarily composed of unique molecules. In addition, approximately 40% of the sequence reads map uniquely to the genome. Together these quality measures indicate our sample libraries are complex and provide good representation of the genome. Data on the whole genome sequence of myeloma at diagnosis and at the time of progression will be presented. Disclosures: Bergsagel: Celgene: Consultancy.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (16) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Corbella ◽  
Bianca Mariani ◽  
Carolina Ferrari ◽  
Francesco Comandatore ◽  
Erika Scaltriti ◽  
...  

We describe three cases of bloodstream infection caused by colistin-resistant Escherichia coli in patients in a tertiary hospital in Italy, between August 2016 and January 2017. Whole genome sequencing detected the mcr-1 gene in three isolated strains belonging to different sequence types (STs). This occurrence of three cases with mcr-1-positive E. coli belonging to different STs in six months suggests a widespread problem in settings where high multidrug resistance is endemic such as in Italy.


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