Author:
Naccache Samia N.,Federman Scot,Veeraraghavan Narayanan,Zaharia Matei,Lee Deanna,Samayoa Erik,Bouquet Jerome,Greninger Alexander L.,Luk Ka-Cheung,Enge Barryett,Wadford Debra A.,Messenger Sharon L.,Genrich Gillian L.,Pellegrino Kristen,Grard Gilda,Leroy Eric,Schneider Bradley S.,Fair Joseph N.,Martínez Miguel A.,Isa Pavel,Crump John A.,DeRisi Joseph L.,Sittler Taylor,Hackett John,Miller Steve,Chiu Charles Y.
Abstract
Unbiased next-generation sequencing (NGS) approaches enable comprehensive pathogen detection in the clinical microbiology laboratory and have numerous applications for public health surveillance, outbreak investigation, and the diagnosis of infectious diseases. However, practical deployment of the technology is hindered by the bioinformatics challenge of analyzing results accurately and in a clinically relevant timeframe. Here we describe SURPI (“sequence-based ultrarapid pathogen identification”), a computational pipeline for pathogen identification from complex metagenomic NGS data generated from clinical samples, and demonstrate use of the pipeline in the analysis of 237 clinical samples comprising more than 1.1 billion sequences. Deployable on both cloud-based and standalone servers, SURPI leverages two state-of-the-art aligners for accelerated analyses, SNAP and RAPSearch, which are as accurate as existing bioinformatics tools but orders of magnitude faster in performance. In fast mode, SURPI detects viruses and bacteria by scanning data sets of 7–500 million reads in 11 min to 5 h, while in comprehensive mode, all known microorganisms are identified, followed by de novo assembly and protein homology searches for divergent viruses in 50 min to 16 h. SURPI has also directly contributed to real-time microbial diagnosis in acutely ill patients, underscoring its potential key role in the development of unbiased NGS-based clinical assays in infectious diseases that demand rapid turnaround times.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
422 articles.
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