Perlas A, Reska T, Croville G, Tarrés-Freixas F, G. Improvements in RNA and DNA nanopore sequencing allow for rapid genetic characterization of avian influenza. Virus Evol. 2025 Feb 18;11(1):veaf010
Avian influenza virus (AIV) currently causes a panzootic with extensive mortality in wild birds, poultry, and wild mammals, thus posing a major threat to global health and underscoring the need for efficient monitoring of its distribution and evolution. We here utilized a well-defined AIV strain to systematically investigate AIV genetic characterization through rapid, portable nanopore sequencing by comparing the latest DNA and RNA nanopore sequencing approaches and various computational pipelines for viral consensus sequence generation and phylogenetic analysis. We show that the latest direct RNA nanopore sequencing updates improve consensus sequence generation, but that the application of the latest DNA nanopore chemistry after reverse transcription and amplification outperforms, such native viral RNA sequencing by achieving higher sequencing accuracy and throughput. We additionally leveraged the direct RNA nanopore sequencing data for the detection of RNA modifications, such as N6-methyladenosine and pseudouridine, which play a role in viral immune evasion. Finally, we applied these sequencing approaches together with portable AIV diagnosis and quantification tools to environmental samples from a poultry farm, demonstrating the feasibility of nanopore sequencing for on-site non-invasive AIV monitoring in real-world outbreak scenarios.
See Also:
Latest articles in those days:
- [preprint]Exploring influenza A virus receptor distribution in the lactating mammary gland of domesticated livestock and in human breast tissue 18 hours ago
- [preprint]The role of wild birds in the global highly pathogenic avian influenza H5 panzootic 18 hours ago
- Long-term culture of chicken tracheal organoids for the purpose of avian influenza virus research 2 days ago
- Seasonal Influenza Vaccination in People who Have Contact With Birds 2 days ago
- JNK kinase promotes inflammatory responses by inducing the expression of the inflammatory amplifier TREM1 during influenza A virus infection 2 days ago
[Go Top] [Close Window]