PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

The sensitivity of massively parallel sequencing for detecting candidate infectious agents associated with human tissue.

  • Richard A Moore,
  • René L Warren,
  • J Douglas Freeman,
  • Julia A Gustavsen,
  • Caroline Chénard,
  • Jan M Friedman,
  • Curtis A Suttle,
  • Yongjun Zhao,
  • Robert A Holt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019838
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 5
p. e19838

Abstract

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Massively parallel sequencing technology now provides the opportunity to sample the transcriptome of a given tissue comprehensively. Transcripts at only a few copies per cell are readily detectable, allowing the discovery of low abundance viral and bacterial transcripts in human tissue samples. Here we describe an approach for mining large sequence data sets for the presence of microbial sequences. Further, we demonstrate the sensitivity of this approach by sequencing human RNA-seq libraries spiked with decreasing amounts of an RNA-virus. At a modest depth of sequencing, viral transcripts can be detected at frequencies less than 1 in 1,000,000. With current sequencing platforms approaching outputs of one billion reads per run, this is a highly sensitive method for detecting putative infectious agents associated with human tissues.