Targeted Amplification and Genetic Sequencing of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Surface Glycoprotein

Author:

Keller Matthew W.ORCID,Keong Lisa M.ORCID,Rambo-Martin Benjamin L.ORCID,Hassell NormanORCID,Lacek KristineORCID,Wilson Malania M.ORCID,Kirby Marie K.ORCID,Liddell JimmaORCID,Owuor D. CollinsORCID,Sheth MiliORCID,Madden JosephORCID,Lee Justin S.ORCID,Kondor Rebecca J.ORCID,Wentworth David E.ORCID,Barnes John R.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is a highly immunogenic and mutable protein that is the target of vaccine prevention and antibody therapeutics. This makes the encoding S-gene an important sequencing target. The SARS-CoV-2 sequencing community overwhelmingly adopted tiling amplicon-based strategies for sequencing the entire genome. As the virus evolved, primer mismatches inevitably led to amplicon drop-out. Given the exposure of the spike protein to host antibodies, mutation occurred here most rapidly, leading to amplicon failure over the most insightful region of the genome. To mitigate this, we developed SpikeSeq, a targeted method to amplify and sequence the S-gene. We evaluated 20 distinct primer designs through iterativein silicoandin vitrotesting to select the optimal primer pairs and run conditions. Once selected, periodicin silicoanalysis monitor primer conservation as SARS-CoV-2 evolves. Despite being designed during the Beta wave, the selected primers remain > 99% conserved through Omicron as of 2023-04-14. To validate the final design, we compared SpikeSeq data and National SARS-CoV-2 Strain Surveillance whole-genome data for 321 matching samples. Consensus sequences for the two methods were highly identical (99.998%) across the S-gene. SpikeSeq can serve as a complement to whole-genome surveillance or be leveraged where only S-gene sequencing is of interest. While SpikeSeq is adaptable to other sequencing platforms, the Nanopore platform validated here is compatible with low to moderate throughputs, and its simplicity better enables users to achieve accurate results, even in low resource settings.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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