Selective Whole-Genome Amplification Is a Robust Method That Enables Scalable Whole-Genome Sequencing of
Plasmodium vivax
from Unprocessed Clinical Samples
journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-20, 06:04authored byAnnie N Cowell, Dorothy E Loy, Sesh A Sundararaman, Hugo Valdivia, Kathleen Fisch, Andres G Lescano, G Christian Baldeviano, Salomon Durand, Vince Gerbasi, Colin J Sutherland, Debbie Nolder, Joseph M Vinetz, Beatrice H Hahn, Elizabeth A Winzeler
ABSTRACT
Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of microbial pathogens from clinical samples is a highly sensitive tool used to gain a deeper understanding of the biology, epidemiology, and drug resistance mechanisms of many infections. However, WGS of organisms which exhibit low densities in their hosts is challenging due to high levels of host genomic DNA (gDNA), which leads to very low coverage of the microbial genome. WGS of
Plasmodium vivax
, the most widely distributed form of malaria, is especially difficult because of low parasite densities and the lack of an
ex vivo
culture system. Current techniques used to enrich
P. vivax
DNA from clinical samples require significant resources or are not consistently effective. Here, we demonstrate that selective whole-genome amplification (SWGA) can enrich
P. vivax
gDNA from unprocessed human blood samples and dried blood spots for high-quality WGS, allowing genetic characterization of isolates that would otherwise have been prohibitively expensive or impossible to sequence. We achieved an average genome coverage of 24×, with up to 95% of the
P. vivax
core genome covered by ≥5 reads. The single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) characteristics and drug resistance mutations seen were consistent with those of other
P. vivax
sequences from a similar region in Peru, demonstrating that SWGA produces high-quality sequences for downstream analysis. SWGA is a robust tool that will enable efficient, cost-effective WGS of
P. vivax
isolates from clinical samples that can be applied to other neglected microbial pathogens.
IMPORTANCE
Malaria is a disease caused by
Plasmodium
parasites that caused 214 million symptomatic cases and 438,000 deaths in 2015.
Plasmodium vivax
is the most widely distributed species, causing the majority of malaria infections outside sub-Saharan Africa. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of
Plasmodium
parasites from clinical samples has revealed important insights into the epidemiology and mechanisms of drug resistance of malaria. However, WGS of
P. vivax
is challenging due to low parasite levels in humans and the lack of a routine system to culture the parasites. Selective whole-genome amplification (SWGA) preferentially amplifies the genomes of pathogens from mixtures of target and host gDNA. Here, we demonstrate that SWGA is a simple, robust method that can be used to enrich
P. vivax
genomic DNA (gDNA) from unprocessed human blood samples and dried blood spots for cost-effective, high-quality WGS.