ViReMa: a virus recombination mapper of next-generation sequencing data characterizes diverse recombinant viral nucleic acids

Author:

Sotcheff Stephanea1,Zhou Yiyang1ORCID,Yeung Jason2,Sun Yan3ORCID,Johnson John E4ORCID,Torbett Bruce E567ORCID,Routh Andrew L189ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston, TX 77555 , USA

2. John Sealy School of Medicine, The University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston, TX 77555 , USA

3. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, The University of Rochester Medical Center , Rochester, NY 14642, USA

4. Department of Integrative Structural and Computational Biology , Scripps Research, La Jolla, CA 92037 , USA

5. Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Washington , Seattle, WA 98105 , USA

6. Center for Immunity and Immunotherapies, Seattle Children's Research Institute , Seattle, WA 98105 , USA

7. Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, University of Washington , Seattle, WA 98195 , USA

8. Sealy Center for Structural Biology and Molecular Biophysics, The University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston, TX 77555 , USA

9. Institute for Human Infections and Immunity, University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston, TX 77555 , USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundGenetic recombination is a tremendous source of intrahost diversity in viruses and is critical for their ability to rapidly adapt to new environments or fitness challenges. While viruses are routinely characterized using high-throughput sequencing techniques, characterizing the genetic products of recombination in next-generation sequencing data remains a challenge. Viral recombination events can be highly diverse and variable in nature, including simple duplications and deletions, or more complex events such as copy/snap-back recombination, intervirus or intersegment recombination, and insertions of host nucleic acids. Due to the variable mechanisms driving virus recombination and the different selection pressures acting on the progeny, recombination junctions rarely adhere to simple canonical sites or sequences. Furthermore, numerous different events may be present simultaneously in a viral population, yielding a complex mutational landscape.FindingsWe have previously developed an algorithm called ViReMa (Virus Recombination Mapper) that bootstraps the bowtie short-read aligner to capture and annotate a wide range of recombinant species found within virus populations. Here, we have updated ViReMa to provide an “error density” function designed to accurately detect recombination events in the longer reads now routinely generated by the Illumina platforms and provide output reports for multiple types of recombinant species using standardized formats. We demonstrate the utility and flexibility of ViReMa in different settings to report deletion events in simulated data from Flock House virus, copy-back RNA species in Sendai viruses, short duplication events in HIV, and virus-to-host recombination in an archaeal DNA virus.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics

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