FLASH-TB: an Application of Next-Generation CRISPR to Detect Drug Resistant Tuberculosis from Direct Sputum.
Trinh Thi Bich TramVu Thi Ngoc HaLe Pham Tien TrieuPhilip M AshtonEmily D CrawfordDo Dang Anh ThuNguyen Le QuangGuy E ThwaitesTimothy M WalkerCatherine AnscombeNguyen Thuy Thuong ThuongPublished in: Journal of clinical microbiology (2023)
Offering patients with tuberculosis (TB) an optimal and timely treatment regimen depends on the rapid detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) drug resistance from clinical samples. Finding Low Abundance Sequences by Hybridization (FLASH) is a technique that harnesses the efficiency, specificity, and flexibility of the Cas9 enzyme to enrich targeted sequences. Here, we used FLASH to amplify 52 candidate genes probably associated with resistance to first- and second-line drugs in the Mtb reference strain (H37Rv), then detect drug resistance mutations in cultured Mtb isolates, and in sputum samples. 92% of H37Rv reads mapped to Mtb targets, with 97.8% of target regions covered at a depth ≥ 10X. Among cultured isolates, FLASH-TB detected the same 17 drug resistance mutations as whole genome sequencing (WGS) did, but with much greater depth. Among the 16 sputum samples, FLASH-TB increased recovery of Mtb DNA compared with WGS (from 1.4% [IQR 0.5-7.5] to 33% [IQR 4.6-66.3]) and average depth reads of targets (from 6.3 [IQR 3.8-10.5] to 1991 [IQR 254.4-3623.7]). FLASH-TB identified Mtb complex in all 16 samples based on IS 1081 and IS 6110 copies. Drug resistance predictions for 15/16 (93.7%) clinical samples were highly concordant with phenotypic DST for isoniazid, rifampicin, amikacin, and kanamycin [15/15 (100%)], ethambutol [12/15 (80%)] and moxifloxacin [14/15 (93.3%)]. These results highlighted the potential of FLASH-TB for detecting Mtb drug resistance from sputum samples.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- drug resistant
- crispr cas
- genome editing
- multidrug resistant
- optical coherence tomography
- emergency department
- acinetobacter baumannii
- cystic fibrosis
- genetic diversity
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- nucleic acid
- circulating tumor
- drug delivery
- hiv infected
- dna methylation
- adverse drug
- climate change
- replacement therapy
- antibiotic resistance genes