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Capturing sequence diversity in metagenomes with comprehensive and scalable probe design
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Capturing sequence diversity in metagenomes with comprehensive and scalable probe design

Hayden C Metsky, Katherine J Siddle, Adrianne Gladden-Young, James Qu, David K Yang, Patrick Brehio, Andrew Goldfarb, Anne Piantadosi, Shirlee Wohl, Amber Carter, …
Nature biotechnology, Vol.37(2), pp.160-168
02-01-2019
PMCID: PMC6587591
PMID: 30718881

Abstract

Animals Computational Biology - methods Culicidae - virology Disease Outbreaks Gene Library Genetic Variation Genome, Viral High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing Humans Lassa Fever - virology Metagenome Metagenomics Nigeria - epidemiology Oligonucleotide Probes Oligonucleotides - genetics Sequence Analysis, DNA Virus Diseases Genomics
Metagenomic sequencing has the potential to transform microbial detection and characterization, but new tools are needed to improve its sensitivity. Here we present CATCH, a computational method to enhance nucleic acid capture for enrichment of diverse microbial taxa. CATCH designs optimal probe sets, with a specified number of oligonucleotides, that achieve full coverage of, and scale well with, known sequence diversity. We focus on applying CATCH to capture viral genomes in complex metagenomic samples. We design, synthesize, and validate multiple probe sets, including one that targets the whole genomes of the 356 viral species known to infect humans. Capture with these probe sets enriches unique viral content on average 18-fold, allowing us to assemble genomes that could not be recovered without enrichment, and accurately preserves within-sample diversity. We also use these probe sets to recover genomes from the 2018 Lassa fever outbreak in Nigeria and to improve detection of uncharacterized viral infections in human and mosquito samples. The results demonstrate that CATCH enables more sensitive and cost-effective metagenomic sequencing.
url
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41587-018-0006-x.pdfView
Published (Version of record) Open
url
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-018-0006-xView
Published (Version of record) Open

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