4.7 Article

Detection of Emerging Vaccine-Related Polioviruses by Deep Sequencing

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 7, Pages 2162-2171

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00144-17

Keywords

poliovirus; high-throughput nucleotide sequencing; poliovirus vaccine; oral; enterovirus; molecular methods; oral vaccines

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Funding

  1. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
  2. Stanford Child Health Research Institute
  3. Stanford NIH-NCATS-CTSA [UL1 TR001085]

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Oral poliovirus vaccine can mutate to regain neurovirulence. To date, evaluation of these mutations has been performed primarily on culture-enriched isolates by using conventional Sanger sequencing. We therefore developed a cultureindependent, deep-sequencing method targeting the 5' untranslated region ( UTR) and P1 genomic region to characterize vaccine-related poliovirus variants. Error analysis of the deep-sequencing method demonstrated reliable detection of poliovirus mutations at levels of <1%, depending on read depth. Sequencing of viral nucleic acids from the stool of vaccinated, asymptomatic children and their close contacts collected during a prospective cohort study in Veracruz, Mexico, revealed no vaccine-derived polioviruses. This was expected given that the longest duration between sequenced sample collection and the end of the most recent national immunization week was 66 days. However, we identified many low-level variants (>5%) distributed across the 5' UTR and P1 genomic region in all three Sabin serotypes, as well as vaccine-related viruses with multiple canonical mutations associated with phenotypic reversion present at high levels (>90%). These results suggest that monitoring emerging vaccinerelated poliovirus variants by deep sequencing may aid in the poliovirus endgame and efforts to ensure global polio eradication.

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