Genomic deletions and rearrangements in monkeypox virus from the 2022 outbreak, USA

Autor: Crystal M. Gigante, Matthew Plumb, Ali Ruprecht, Hui Zhao, Vaughn Wicker, Kimberly Wilkins, Audrey Matheny, Theodora Khan, Whitni Davidson, Mili Sheth, Alex Burgin, Mark Burroughs, Jasmine Padilla, Justin S. Lee, Dhwani Batra, Ethan E. Hetrick, Dakota T. Howard, Jacob Garfin, Lisa Tate, Shan J. Hubsmith, Rafael M. Mendoza, Danielle Stanek, Sarah Gillani, Michelle Lee, Anil Mangla, David Blythe, Sean SierraPatev, Kristin Carpenter-Azevedo, Richard C. Huard, Glen Gallagher, Joshua Hall, Stephanie Ash, Lynsey Kovar, Matthew H. Seabolt, Michael R. Weigand, Inger Damon, Panayampalli S. Satheshkumar, Andrea M. McCollum, Christina L. Hutson, Xiong Wang, Yu Li
Rok vydání: 2022
Popis: Genomic surveillance of monkeypox virus (MPXV) during the 2022 outbreak has been mainly focused on single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) changes. DNA viruses, including MPXV, have a lower SNP mutation rate than RNA viruses due to higher fidelity replication machinery. We identified a large genomic rearrangement in a MPXV sequence from a 2022 case in the state of Minnesota (MN), USA, from an abnormal, uneven MPXV read mapping coverage profile in whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data. We further screened WGS data of 206 U.S. MPXV samples and found seven (3.4 percent) sequenced genomes contained similar abnormal read coverage profiles that suggested putative large deletions or genomic rearrangements. Here, we present three MPXV genomes containing deletions ranging from 2.3 to 15 kb and four genomes containing more complex rearrangements. Five genomic changes were each only seen in one sample, but two sequences from linked cases shared an identical 2.3 kb deletion in the 3’ terminal region. All samples were positive using VAC1 and Clade II (formerly West African)-specific MPXV diagnostic tests; however, large deletions and genomic rearrangements like the ones reported here have the potential to result in viruses in which the target of a PCR diagnostic test is deleted. The emergence of genomic rearrangements during the outbreak may have public health implications and highlight the importance of continued genomic surveillance.
Databáze: OpenAIRE