Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid

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Standard

Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid. / Kirstahler, Philipp; Bjerrum, Søren Solborg; Friis-Møller, Alice; la Cour, Morten; Aarestrup, Frank M; Westh, Henrik; Pamp, Sünje Johanna.

I: Scientific Reports, Bind 8, 4126, 2018.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kirstahler, P, Bjerrum, SS, Friis-Møller, A, la Cour, M, Aarestrup, FM, Westh, H & Pamp, SJ 2018, 'Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid', Scientific Reports, bind 8, 4126. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-22416-4

APA

Kirstahler, P., Bjerrum, S. S., Friis-Møller, A., la Cour, M., Aarestrup, F. M., Westh, H., & Pamp, S. J. (2018). Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid. Scientific Reports, 8, [4126]. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-22416-4

Vancouver

Kirstahler P, Bjerrum SS, Friis-Møller A, la Cour M, Aarestrup FM, Westh H o.a. Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid. Scientific Reports. 2018;8. 4126. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-22416-4

Author

Kirstahler, Philipp ; Bjerrum, Søren Solborg ; Friis-Møller, Alice ; la Cour, Morten ; Aarestrup, Frank M ; Westh, Henrik ; Pamp, Sünje Johanna. / Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid. I: Scientific Reports. 2018 ; Bind 8.

Bibtex

@article{6054af41ac9f46e58cb3c2c27a5d039c,
title = "Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid",
abstract = "Advances in genomics have the potential to revolutionize clinical diagnostics. Here, we examine the microbiome of vitreous (intraocular body fluid) from patients who developed endophthalmitis following cataract surgery or intravitreal injection. Endophthalmitis is an inflammation of the intraocular cavity and can lead to a permanent loss of vision. As controls, we included vitreous from endophthalmitis-negative patients, balanced salt solution used during vitrectomy and DNA extraction blanks. We compared two DNA isolation procedures and found that an ultraclean production of reagents appeared to reduce background DNA in these low microbial biomass samples. We created a curated microbial genome database (>5700 genomes) and designed a metagenomics workflow with filtering steps to reduce DNA sequences originating from: (i) human hosts, (ii) ambiguousness/contaminants in public microbial reference genomes and (iii) the environment. Our metagenomic read classification revealed in nearly all cases the same microorganism that was determined in cultivation- and mass spectrometry-based analyses. For some patients, we identified the sequence type of the microorganism and antibiotic resistance genes through analyses of whole genome sequence (WGS) assemblies of isolates and metagenomic assemblies. Together, we conclude that genomics-based analyses of human ocular body fluid specimens can provide actionable information relevant to infectious disease management.",
author = "Philipp Kirstahler and Bjerrum, {S{\o}ren Solborg} and Alice Friis-M{\o}ller and {la Cour}, Morten and Aarestrup, {Frank M} and Henrik Westh and Pamp, {S{\"u}nje Johanna}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1038/s41598-018-22416-4",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Genomics-Based Identification of Microorganisms in Human Ocular Body Fluid

AU - Kirstahler, Philipp

AU - Bjerrum, Søren Solborg

AU - Friis-Møller, Alice

AU - la Cour, Morten

AU - Aarestrup, Frank M

AU - Westh, Henrik

AU - Pamp, Sünje Johanna

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Advances in genomics have the potential to revolutionize clinical diagnostics. Here, we examine the microbiome of vitreous (intraocular body fluid) from patients who developed endophthalmitis following cataract surgery or intravitreal injection. Endophthalmitis is an inflammation of the intraocular cavity and can lead to a permanent loss of vision. As controls, we included vitreous from endophthalmitis-negative patients, balanced salt solution used during vitrectomy and DNA extraction blanks. We compared two DNA isolation procedures and found that an ultraclean production of reagents appeared to reduce background DNA in these low microbial biomass samples. We created a curated microbial genome database (>5700 genomes) and designed a metagenomics workflow with filtering steps to reduce DNA sequences originating from: (i) human hosts, (ii) ambiguousness/contaminants in public microbial reference genomes and (iii) the environment. Our metagenomic read classification revealed in nearly all cases the same microorganism that was determined in cultivation- and mass spectrometry-based analyses. For some patients, we identified the sequence type of the microorganism and antibiotic resistance genes through analyses of whole genome sequence (WGS) assemblies of isolates and metagenomic assemblies. Together, we conclude that genomics-based analyses of human ocular body fluid specimens can provide actionable information relevant to infectious disease management.

AB - Advances in genomics have the potential to revolutionize clinical diagnostics. Here, we examine the microbiome of vitreous (intraocular body fluid) from patients who developed endophthalmitis following cataract surgery or intravitreal injection. Endophthalmitis is an inflammation of the intraocular cavity and can lead to a permanent loss of vision. As controls, we included vitreous from endophthalmitis-negative patients, balanced salt solution used during vitrectomy and DNA extraction blanks. We compared two DNA isolation procedures and found that an ultraclean production of reagents appeared to reduce background DNA in these low microbial biomass samples. We created a curated microbial genome database (>5700 genomes) and designed a metagenomics workflow with filtering steps to reduce DNA sequences originating from: (i) human hosts, (ii) ambiguousness/contaminants in public microbial reference genomes and (iii) the environment. Our metagenomic read classification revealed in nearly all cases the same microorganism that was determined in cultivation- and mass spectrometry-based analyses. For some patients, we identified the sequence type of the microorganism and antibiotic resistance genes through analyses of whole genome sequence (WGS) assemblies of isolates and metagenomic assemblies. Together, we conclude that genomics-based analyses of human ocular body fluid specimens can provide actionable information relevant to infectious disease management.

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-018-22416-4

DO - 10.1038/s41598-018-22416-4

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29515160

VL - 8

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

M1 - 4126

ER -

ID: 213166663