scholarly journals Comparison of Bacterial Microbiota in Raw Mare’s Milk and Koumiss Using PacBio Single Molecule Real-Time Sequencing Technology

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meng Zhang ◽  
Na Dang ◽  
Dongyan Ren ◽  
Feiyan Zhao ◽  
Ruirui Lv ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 3752-3752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine C. Smith ◽  
Michael Brown ◽  
Jason Chin ◽  
Corynn Kasap ◽  
Sara Salerno ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3752 Background: Secondary kinase domain (KD) mutations are the most well-recognized mechanism of resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and other cancers. In some cases, multiple drug resistant KD mutations can coexist in an individual patient (“polyclonality”). Alternatively, more than one mutation can occur in tandem on a single allele (“compound mutations”) following response and relapse to sequentially administered TKI therapy. Distinguishing between these two scenarios can inform the clinical choice of subsequent TKI treatment. There is currently no clinically adaptable methodology that offers the ability to distinguish polyclonal from compound mutations. Due to the size of the BCR-ABL KD where TKI-resistant mutations are detected, next-generation platforms are unable to generate reads of sufficient length to determine if two mutations separated by 500 nt reside on the same allele. Pacific Biosciences RS Single Molecule Real Time (SMRT) circular consensus sequencing technology is a novel third generation deep sequencing technology capable of rapidly and reliably achieving average read lengths of ∼1000bp (Travers et al, 2010) and frequently beyond 3000bp, allowing sequencing of the entire ABL KD on single strand of DNA. We sought to address the ability of SMRT sequencing technology to distinguish polyclonal from compound mutations using clinical samples obtained from patients who have relapsed on BCR-ABL TKI treatment. Results: We analyzed an 863bp area of the BCR-ABL KD in 6 patients who had clinically relapsed on ABL kinase inhibitor therapy. SMRT sequencing detected mutations at a sensitivity of ∼1–2% of the total sequenced population, and successfully distinguished polyclonal from compound BCR-ABL KD mutations in several patient samples. Results were largely consistent with those obtained by PCR subcloning and sequencing, although SMRT sequencing detected additional mutations and/or mutation combinations. In the most complex case, 7 distinct mutation-bearing alleles were detected in an individual patient after sequential relapse on imatinib and dasatinib. Mutant clones contained single and compound mutations combining distinct mutations (Y253H, T315F, T315A, T315I, T319A, E355G). Three distinct substitutions at residue T315 were detected: T315A, T315I and T315F. Notably, these findings are clinically important as the T315A mutation confers resistance to dasatinib but not imatinib, while the T315F and T315I mutations are resistant to all three clinically approved BCR/ABL inhibitors (imatinib, dasatinib, and nilotinib). Phospho-flow analysis for p-Crkl, a direct substrate of BCR-ABL, was conducted following ex vivo exposure of patient cells from the same time point to all three BCR-ABL inhibitors, and demonstrated the existence of distinct populations of cells with varying sensitivity to each drug (i.e. polyclonal drug sensitivity), underscoring the potential clinical importance of distinguishing polyclonal from compound mutations. Additionally, SMRT sequencing routinely detected alleles harboring compound mutations not detectable by conventional direct sequencing. Data analysis of samples from additional patients is ongoing and will be presented. Conclusions: Pacific Biosciences RS SMRT sequencing sensitively detects KD mutations in patient samples and can distinguish TKI-resistant clones containing compound mutations to reveal a complex mutational landscape in an individual patient not detectable by conventional sequencing. SMRT sequencing of the BCR-ABL KD can feasibly be developed into a rapid and economical clinical test with the additional advantages of increased sensitivity and reliability over current methods. Given the growing numbers of patients exposed to multiple TKIs in a sequential manner, the ability to accurately and sensitively characterize drug-resistant alleles promises to further facilitate a personalized approach to patient management. Disclosures: Brown: Pacific Biosciences: Employment. Chin:Pacific Biosciences: Employment. Travers:Pacific Biosciences: Employment. Wang:Pacific Biosciences: Employment. Kasarskis:Pacific Biosciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Schadt:Pacific Biosciences: Employment, Equity Ownership.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongxing Qiao ◽  
Xiaojing Zhang ◽  
Hongtao Shi ◽  
Yuzhen Song ◽  
Chuanzhou Bian

Background. Astragalus was a well-known traditional herbal medicine, widely used in human s , livestock and poultry in China and E ast Asia. Fermentation could improve health-promoting biological substance by probiotics. Methods. We investigated Astragalus that was fermented using probiotics including Enterococcus faecium , Lactobacillus plantarum and E nterococcus faecium + L actobacillus plantarum and applied the PacBio single molecule, real-time sequencing technology (SMRT) to evaluat e the quality of Astragalus fermentation production. Results. We found the production rates of acetic acid, methylacetic acid , ethylacetic acid and lactic acid using E. faecium + L. plantarum fermentation were 1866.24 mg/kg on day 15 , 203.80 mg/kg on day 30 , 996.04 mg/kg on day 15 and 3081.99 mg/kg on day 20 , respectively. Other production rates were: polysaccharide s, 9.43%, 8.51% and 7 . 59% on day 10; saponins , 19.6912 mg/g, 21.6630 mg/g and 20.2084 mg/g on day 15; and flavonoid s, 1.9032 mg/g, 2.0835 mg/g and 1.7086 mg/g on day 20 using E . faecium , L . plantarum and E. faecium + L. plantarum , respectively. According to SMRT analysis of the microbial composition s of nine Astragalus samples, we found after fermentation on day 3 , E. faecium and L. plantarum became the most prevalent species. Moreover, E. faecium + L. plantarum gave more positive effects than single strains in the Astragalus solid state fermentation process. Inclusion. Our data have demonstrate d that the SMRT sequencing platform is applicable to assessing the quality of Astragalus fermentation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (25) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sawannee Sutheeworapong ◽  
Nuthatai Suteerapongpan ◽  
Prasobsook Paenkaew ◽  
Peerada Prommeenate ◽  
Supapon Cheevadhanarak ◽  
...  

Xylaria sp. BCC 1067 is a wood-decaying fungus which is capable of producing lignocellulolytic enzymes. Based on the results of a single-molecule real-time sequencing technology analysis, we present the first draft genome of Xylaria sp. BCC 1067, comprising 54.1 Mb with 12,112 protein-coding genes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document