Whole genome enrichment approach for rapid detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and drug resistance-associated mutations from direct sputum sequencing

Post Date: 
2020-02-20
Publication: 
Tuberculosis
Summary: 

Tuberculosis is the leading cause of death among infectious diseases worldwide. Detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), using routine culture-based methods is time consuming resulting in delayed diagnosis and poor treatment outcomes. Currently available molecular tests provide faster diagnosis but are able to screen only limited hot-spot mutations. Whole genome sequencing from direct sputum offers a potential solution, however, due to the presence of other microbes and host DNA its use in diagnostic testing remains challenging.

In this study, we present a targeted Mtb-enrichment assay for lineage-4 coupled with an improved analysis pipeline that uses 1657 bacterial taxa as background for reducing non-Mtb genome from sputum DNA. This method drastically improved the recovery of Mtb DNA from sputum (Mtb alignment increased from 3% to >65%) as compared to non-enrichment-based sequencing. We obtained >99% Mtb genome coverage as compared to 49% in non-enriched sputum sequencing. We were able to identify Mtb positive samples from controls with 100% accuracy using Mpt64 gene coverage. Our method not only achieved 100% sensitivity to resistance variants profiled by line probe assay (LPA), but also outperformed LPA in determining drug resistance based on phenotypic drug susceptibility tests for 6 anti-tuberculosis drugs (accuracy of 97.7% and 92.8% by enriched WGS and LPA, respectively).

Citation: 
Soundararajan L, Kambli P, Priyadarshini S, Let B, Murugan S, Iravatham C, Tornheim JA, Rodrigues C, Gupta R, Ramprasad VL. Whole genome enrichment approach for rapid detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and drug resistance-associated mutations from direct sputum sequencing. Tuberculosis (Edinb). 2020 Mar;121:101915. doi: 10.1016/j.tube.2020.101915. Epub 2020 Feb 20. PMID: 32279871.