TB Research

Genetic diversity within diagnostic sputum samples is mirrored in the culture of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>

Carla Mariner-Llicer, Galo A. Goig, Manuela Torres‐Puente, Sergo Vashakidze, Luis M. Villamayor, Belén Saavedra, Edson Mambuque, Iza Khurtsilava, et al. (16 authors)

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2024-01

Abstract

ABSTRACT Culturing Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) from tuberculosis cases is the basis for many research and clinical applications. Paradoxically, it is assumed to impose a diversity bottleneck, which, if true, would entail unexplored consequences. The alternative, culture-free sequencing from diagnostic samples, is a promising but challenging approach both to obtain and analyse the MTB genome from the complex sample. This study obtains high-quality genomes of sputum-culture pairs from two different settings after developing a workflow for sequencing from sputum and a tailored bioinformatics pipeline. Our approach reveals that 88% of variants called in culture-free sequencing analysis are false positives due to supplementary alignments, mostly in enriched-sputa samples. Overall, contrary to the bottleneck dogma, we identify a 97% variant agreement within sputum-culture pairs, with a high correlation also in the variants’ frequency (0.98). Our findings extrapolate to all publicly available data, thus demonstrating that in most cases culture accurately mirrors clinical samples.

MeSH terms

  • Sputum
  • Bottleneck
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Tuberculosis
  • Computational biology
  • Biology
  • False positive paradox
  • Genome
  • Workflow
  • Whole genome sequencing
  • Sputum culture
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex
  • Diversity (politics)
  • Genetics