Publication | Open Access
Does Choice Matter? Reference-Based Alignment for Molecular Epidemiology of Tuberculosis
30
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
Molecular EpidemiologyGeneticsTuberculosis PreventionGenetic EpidemiologyGenomicsSequence AlignmentMycobacterium Tuberculosis TransmissionHigh Throughput SequencingDrug ResistancePhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyTuberculosis DiagnosticsMolecular DiagnosticsHealth SciencesPulmonary TuberculosisM. Tuberculosis LineageTuberculosisSequencingBioinformaticsClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyNext-generation SequencingComputational BiologyGenome SequencingMicrobiologyDoes Choice MatterMedicineSequence Assembly
When using genome sequencing for molecular epidemiology, short sequence reads are aligned to an arbitrary reference strain to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms. We investigated whether reference genome selection influences epidemiological inferences of Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission by aligning sequence reads from 162 closely related lineage 4 (Euro-American) isolates to 7 different genomes. Phylogenetic trees were consistent with use of all but the most divergent genomes, suggesting that reference choice can be based on considerations other than M. tuberculosis lineage.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1