Abstract
Tuberculosis remains a major global health problem. Laboratory diagnostic methods that allow effective, early detection of cases are central to management of tuberculosis in the individual patient and in the community. Since the 1880s, laboratory diagnosis of tuberculosis has relied primarily on microscopy and culture. However, microscopy fails to provide species- or lineage-level identification and culture-based workflows for diagnosis of tuberculosis remain complex, expensive, slow, technically demanding and poorly able to handle mixed infections. We therefore explored the potential of shotgun metagenomics, sequencing of DNA from samples without culture or target-specific amplification or capture, to detect and characterise strains from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in smear-positive sputum samples obtained from The Gambia in West Africa. Eight smear- and culture-positive sputum samples were investigated using a differential-lysis protocol followed by a kit-based DNA extraction method, with sequencing performed on a benchtop sequencing instrument, the Illumina MiSeq. The number of sequence reads in each sputum-derived metagenome ranged from 989,442 to 2,818,238. The proportion of reads in each metagenome mapping against the human genome ranged from 20% to 99%. We were able to detect sequences from the M. tuberculosis complex in all eight samples, with coverage of the H37Rv reference genome ranging from 0.002X to 0.7X. By analysing the distribution of large sequence polymorphisms (deletions and the locations of the insertion element IS6110) and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), we were able to assign seven of eight metagenome-derived genomes to a species and lineage within the M. tuberculosis complex. Two metagenome-derived mycobacterial genomes were assigned to M. africanum, a species largely confined to West Africa; the others that could be assigned belonged to lineages T, H or LAM within the clade of “modern” M. tuberculosis strains. We have provided proof of principle that shotgun metagenomics can be used to detect and characterise M. tuberculosis sequences from sputum samples without culture or target-specific amplification or capture, using an accessible benchtop-sequencing platform, the Illumina MiSeq, and relatively simple DNA extraction, sequencing and bioinformatics protocols. In our hands, sputum metagenomics does not yet deliver sufficient depth of coverage to allow sequence-based sensitivity testing; it remains to be determined whether improvements in DNA extraction protocols alone can deliver this or whether culture, capture or amplification steps will be required. Nonetheless, we can foresee a tipping point when a unified automated metagenomics-based workflow might start to compete with the plethora of methods currently in use in the diagnostic microbiology laboratory.
Highlights
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infection, primarily of the lungs, caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis and related species within the M. tuberculosis complex
Microscopy fails to provide species-level identification of acid-fast bacilli (Maiga et al, 2012). Such identification is important in guiding treatment, because pathogenic mycobacteria from outside the M. tuberculosis complex often fail to respond to conventional anti-TB treatment (Maiga et al, 2012)
As isolation of mycobacteria in pure culture and sensitivity testing remain onerous, in resource-poor settings these steps are omitted and, even in well-resourced laboratories, typically only one or a few single-colony subcultures are followed up from each sample. This leads to under-recognition of mixed infections, where more than one strain from the M. tuberculosis complex is present or where TB co-occurs with infection by other mycobacteria (Shamputa et al, 2004; Warren et al, 2004; Cohen et al, 2011; Wang et al, 2011)
Summary
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infection, primarily of the lungs, caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis and related species within the M. tuberculosis complex. As isolation of mycobacteria in pure culture and sensitivity testing remain onerous, in resource-poor settings these steps are omitted and, even in well-resourced laboratories, typically only one or a few single-colony subcultures are followed up from each sample This leads to under-recognition of mixed infections, where more than one strain from the M. tuberculosis complex is present or where TB co-occurs with infection by other mycobacteria (Shamputa et al, 2004; Warren et al, 2004; Cohen et al, 2011; Wang et al, 2011). As an alternative to culture and phenotypic sensitivity testing, the WHO has recently recommended a new, rapid, automated, real-time amplification-based TB diagnostic test, the Xpert MTB/RIF assay (WHO, 2011) This system allows simultaneous detection of M. tuberculosis and rifampicin-resistance mutations in a closed system, suitable for use in a simple laboratory setting, while providing a result in less than two hours directly from sputum samples (Helb et al, 2010). We explore the potential of metagenomics in detecting and characterising Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. africanum strains in smear-positive sputum samples from patients from The Gambia in West Africa
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