News Release

Mobile DNA sequencer shows potential for disease surveillance

A pocket-sized device that can rapidly determine the sequence of an organism's DNA has shown its potential in disease detection, according to a study published in the open access, open data journal GigaScience

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BMC (BioMed Central)

MinION Close Up

image: This is a close up of MinION. view more 

Credit: Andrew Kilianski

A pocket-sized device that can rapidly determine the sequence of an organism's DNA has shown its potential in disease detection, according to a study published in the open access, open data journal GigaScience.

In the first analysis of its kind, researchers were able to use the device to accurately identify a range of closely-related bacteria and viruses within six hours, demonstrating the potential for this technology to be used as a mobile diagnostic clinic during outbreaks.

The MinION™ 'Nanopore sequencer' is a low-cost palm-sized sequencing device from Oxford Nanopore Technologies that has been made available to some research groups for testing. It is powered and operated via a USB connection plugged into a laptop, which means that it could potentially be used for on-site clinical analyses in remote locations, negating the need for samples to be sent off to laboratories.

Lead author Andrew Kilianski from Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, USA, whose team tested the device in joint collaboration with Signature Science, LLC, said: "Our findings are important because we have for the first time communicated to the community that this technology can be incredibly useful in its current state.

"Being able to accurately identify and characterize strains of viruses and bacteria using a mobile platform is attractive to anyone collecting biological samples in the field. And we expect that as the technology improves, the sequencing will generally become cheaper, faster and more accurate, and could have further clinical applications."

The researchers were able to use the MinION™ to accurately identify and differentiate viral and bacterial species from samples. Within six hours, the device generated sufficient data to identify an E. coli sample down to species level, and three poxviruses (cowpox, vaccinia-MVA, and vaccinia-Lister) down to strain level. The device was able to distinguish between the two vaccinia strains despite them being closely related and over 98% similar to each other.

The technology relies on protein 'nanopores' to determine the sequence of a strand of DNA. At the core of the protein is a hollow tube only a few nanometres in diameter, through which a single DNA strands can pass. As the DNA strand passes through the nanopore, it causes characteristic electrical signatures, from which bases can be identified, and the sequence of the strand determined.

Despite MinION™'s observed read error rate of 30%, which is higher than that of other DNA sequencing methods, the team was able to overcome some of the current limitations by utilizing an approach based on amplified DNA (an 'amplicon' approach). This allowed them to confidently differentiate between closely-related strains.

The amplicon approach allows for the analysis of more complex mixed samples containing a range of organisms in a short runtime. For whole genome sequencing approaches in less pure samples, they note that improvements will need to be made as the technology matures.

The authors state it would be difficult to accurately characterize pathogens within a complex sample in six hours without applying the amplicon methodology.

###

Media Contact

Joel Winston
Media Officer
BioMed Central
T: +44 (0)20 3192 2081 E: Joel.Winston@biomedcentral.com

Notes to editor:

1. Photos of research groups using MinION™ are available from: http://bit.ly/1EC72fB

2. Research article

Andy Kilianski, Jamie L Haas, Elizabeth J Corriveau, Alvin T Liem, Kristen L Willis, Dana R Kadavy, C Nicole Rosenzweig and Samuel S Minot

Bacterial and viral identification and differentiation by amplicon sequencing on the MinION nanopore sequencer

GigaScience 2015

DOI: 10.1186/s13742-015-0051-z

To request an embargoed copy of the research article, please contact Joel.Winston@biomedcentral.com

After embargo, article available at journal website here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13742-015-0051-z

3. In addition to the publication of the research paper, GigaScience released the associated data and code in their journal's linked database, GigaDB, further increasing the transparency and reproducibility of this work as well as making more MinION data available to the community for assessment and comparison to their own projects to continue to improve this technology. As per community sharing standards, the raw reads for these data are also available in the EBI ENA database under accession numbers: ERP009678 and BioProject PRJEB8656.

Kilianski, A; Haas, JL; Corriveau, EJ; Liem, AT; Willis, KL; Kadavy, DR; Rosenzweig, CN; Minot, SS (2015): Supporting data and materials from "Bacterial and viral identification and differentiation by amplicon sequencing on the MinION nanopore sequencer". GigaScience Database

Data available at journal website here: http://dx.doi.org/10.5524/100134

4. GigaScience aims to revolutionize data dissemination, organization, understanding, and use. An online open-access open-data journal, we publish 'big-data' studies from the entire spectrum of life and biomedical sciences. To achieve our goals, the journal has a novel publication format: one that links standard manuscript publication with an extensive database that hosts all associated data and provides data analysis tools and cloud-computing resources.

GigaScience aims to increase transparency and reproducibility of research, emphasizing data quality and utility over subjective assessments of immediate impact. To enable future access and analyses, we require that all supporting data and source code be publically available and we provide an extensive database and cloud repository that can host associated data, supplementary information and tools.

5. BioMed Central is an STM (Science, Technology and Medicine) publisher which has pioneered the open access publishing model. All peer-reviewed research articles published by BioMed Central are made immediately and freely accessible online, and are licensed to allow redistribution and reuse. BioMed Central is part of Springer Science+Business Media, a leading global publisher in the STM sector. http://www.biomedcentral.com

The conclusions and opinions presented here are those of the authors alone and are not the official policy of the US Army, ECBC, or the US Government.


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.