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Rapid genotyping of tilapia lake virus (TiLV) using Nanopore sequencing
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Metadata
Document Title
Rapid genotyping of tilapia lake virus (TiLV) using Nanopore sequencing
Author
Delamare-Deboutteville J, Taengphu S, Gan HM, Kayansamruaj P, Debnath PP, Barnes A, Wilkinson S, Kawasaki M, Mohan CV, Senapin S, Dong HT
Name from Authors Collection
Scopus Author ID
57193195025
Affiliations
CGIAR; Worldfish; Mahidol University; Kasetsart University; CGIAR; Worldfish; University of Queensland; University of Queensland; Victoria University Wellington; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); Suan Sunandha Rajabhat University
Type
Article
Source Title
JOURNAL OF FISH DISEASES
Year
2021
Volume
44
Issue
10
Page
1491-1502
Open Access
hybrid, Green Published, Green Submitted
Publisher
WILEY
DOI
10.1111/jfd.13467
Format
Abstract
Infectious diseases represent one of the major challenges to sustainable aquaculture production. Rapid, accurate diagnosis and genotyping of emerging pathogens during early-suspected disease cases is critical to facilitate timely response to deploy adequate control measures and prevent or reduce spread. Currently, most laboratories use PCR to amplify partial pathogen genomic regions, occasionally combined with sequencing of PCR amplicon(s) using conventional Sanger sequencing services for confirmatory diagnosis. The main limitation of this approach is the lengthy turnaround time. Here, we report an innovative approach using a previously developed specific PCR assay for pathogen diagnosis combined with a new Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT)-based amplicon sequencing method for pathogen genotyping. Using fish clinical samples, we applied this approach for the rapid confirmation of PCR amplicon sequences identity and genotyping of tilapia lake virus (TiLV), a disease-causing virus affecting tilapia aquaculture globally. The consensus sequences obtained after polishing exhibit strikingly high identity to references derived by Illumina and Sanger methods (99.83%-100%). This study suggests that ONT-based amplicon sequencing is a promising platform to deploy in regional aquatic animal health diagnostic laboratories in low- and medium-income countries, for fast identification and genotyping of emerging infectious pathogens from field samples within a single day.
Keyword
) | bioinformatics and genotyping | Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) | Oxford Nanopore Technologies | Red tilapia (Oreochromis spp | semi-nested RT-PCR | Tilapia lake virus
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
Funding Sponsor
CGIAR Trust Fund
License
CC BY-NC-ND
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS