U-CAN-seq: A Universal Competition Assay by Nanopore Sequencing
Author:
Diaz Jennifer1ORCID, Sears John1, Chang Che-Kang1, Burdick Jane2ORCID, Law Isabella2, Sanders Wes1, Linnertz Colton2ORCID, Sylvester Paul2, Moorman Nathaniel13, Ferris Martin T.2ORCID, Heise Mark T.123
Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA 2. Department of Genetics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA 3. The Rapidly Emerging Antiviral Drug Development Initiative (READDI), Chapel Hill, NC 275114, USA
Abstract
RNA viruses quickly evolve subtle genotypic changes that can have major impacts on viral fitness and host range, with potential consequences for human health. It is therefore important to understand the evolutionary fitness of novel viral variants relative to well-studied genotypes of epidemic viruses. Competition assays are an effective and rigorous system with which to assess the relative fitness of viral genotypes. However, it is challenging to quickly and cheaply distinguish and quantify fitness differences between very similar viral genotypes. Here, we describe a protocol for using reverse transcription PCR in combination with commercial nanopore sequencing services to perform competition assays on untagged RNA viruses. Our assay, called the Universal Competition Assay by Nanopore Sequencing (U-CAN-seq), is relatively cheap and highly sensitive. We used a well-studied N24A mutation in the chikungunya virus (CHIKV) nsp3 gene to confirm that we could detect a competitive disadvantage using U-CAN-seq. We also used this approach to show that mutations to the CHIKV 5′ conserved sequence element that disrupt sequence but not structure did not affect the fitness of CHIKV. However, similar mutations to an adjacent CHIKV stem loop (SL3) did cause a fitness disadvantage compared to wild-type CHIKV, suggesting that structure-independent, primary sequence determinants in this loop play an important role in CHIKV biology. Our novel findings illustrate the utility of the U-CAN-seq competition assay.
Reference35 articles.
1. Domingo, E., García-Crespo, C., Lobo-Vega, R., and Perales, C. (2021). Mutation Rates, Mutation Frequencies, and Proofreading-Repair Activities in RNA Virus Genetics. Viruses, 13. 2. Mandary, M.B., Masomian, M., and Poh, C.L. (2019). Impact of RNA Virus Evolution on Quasispecies Formation and Virulence. Int. J. Mol. Sci., 20. 3. Szemiel, A.M., Merits, A., Orton, R.J., MacLean, O.A., Pinto, R.M., Wickenhagen, A., Lieber, G., Turnbull, M.L., Wang, S., and Furnon, W. (2021). In Vitro Selection of Remdesivir Resistance Suggests Evolutionary Predictability of SARS-CoV-2. PLoS Pathog., 17. 4. Relative Replication Fitness of Multi-Nucleoside Analogue-Resistant HIV-1 Strains Bearing a Dipeptide Insertion in the Fingers Subdomain of the Reverse Transcriptase and Mutations at Codons 67 and 215;Prado;Virology,2004 5. Competitive Fitness of Nevirapine-Resistant Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Mutants;Collins;J. Virol.,2004
|
|