Title
Next-generation sequencing analysis of pathogenic leptospira: A way forward for understanding infectious disease dynamics in low/middle-income, disease-endemic settings
Date Issued
05 May 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Agampodi S.B.
Yale University
Publisher(s)
American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Abstract
In the current genomic era, knowledge of diversity of Leptospira, the spirochetal agents of leptospirosis, is changing rapidly. Next-generation sequencing has decreased in price and increased in scale, with the potential to democratize large-scale analysis of pathogens in resource-limited, low/middle-income (LMIC) regions. Consequently, the molecular classification of Leptospira, a pathogen disproportionately affecting LMIC countries, has changed dramatically over the last decade. Leptospira classification and molecular understandings of pathogen diversity have rapidly evolved, now most precisely based on core genome analysis supplemented by new insights provided by cultureindependent methods directly using body fluids such as blood and urine. In places where leptospirosis disease burden is highest, genomic technologies have not been available, and serology-based methods remain the mainstay of leptospiral classification. Understanding the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and ultimately new approaches to treating and preventing leptospirosis requires detailed knowledge of regionally circulating Leptospira in highly endemic settings. Next-generation sequencing-based, culture-independent typing overcomes the limitation of culture isolation of Leptospira from clinical samples, with promise of providing public health-actionable information applicable to leptospirosis-endemic LMIC settings.
Start page
1625
End page
1627
Volume
104
Issue
5
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Patología
Enfermedades infecciosas
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85105593457
PubMed ID
Source
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
ISSN of the container
00029637
Sponsor(s)
Financial support: This work was supported by U.S. Public Health Service, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health, through grant number U19AI115658.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus