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Sequence analysis of pooled bacterial samples enables identification of strain variation in group A streptococcus
Author(s) -
Rigbe Weldatsadik,
Jingwen Wang,
Kai Puhakainen,
Hong Jiao,
Jari Jalava,
Kati Räisänen,
Neeta Datta,
Tiina Skoog,
Jaana Vuopio,
T. Sakari Jokiranta,
Juha Kere
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/srep45771
Subject(s) - biology , streptococcus pyogenes , indel , dna sequencing , genome , genetics , whole genome sequencing , strain (injury) , sequence analysis , genetic variation , population , computational biology , single nucleotide polymorphism , genotype , dna , gene , bacteria , demography , anatomy , sociology , staphylococcus aureus
Knowledge of the genomic variation among different strains of a pathogenic microbial species can help in selecting optimal candidates for diagnostic assays and vaccine development. Pooled sequencing (Pool-seq) is a cost effective approach for population level genetic studies that require large numbers of samples such as various strains of a microbe. To test the use of Pool-seq in identifying variation, we pooled DNA of 100 Streptococcus pyogenes strains of different emm types in two pools, each containing 50 strains. We used four variant calling tools (Freebayes, UnifiedGenotyper, SNVer, and SAMtools) and one emm 1 strain, SF370, as a reference genome. In total 63719 SNPs and 164 INDELs were identified in the two pools concordantly by at least two of the tools. Majority of the variants (93.4%) from six individually sequenced strains used in the pools could be identified from the two pools and 72.3% and 97.4% of the variants in the pools could be mined from the analysis of the 44 complete Str. pyogenes genomes and 3407 sequence runs deposited in the European Nucleotide Archive respectively. We conclude that DNA sequencing of pooled samples of large numbers of bacterial strains is a robust, rapid and cost-efficient way to discover sequence variation.

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