Whole Genome Sequencing to support GenomeTrakr-Discipline A: Microbiology- Track 4

NIH RePORTER · FDA · U19 · $138,091 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT The long-term goal of this project is to reduce the frequency of disease outbreaks caused by food and other environmental sources contaminated with enteric pathogens. Identification and removal of sources of contamination is key to achieving this goal. To link putative sources to patient clusters public health laboratories historically look for matching genetic fingerprints using Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE). However, PFGE will have been abandoned and replaced by surveillance based on Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS). WGS is being adopted by state and federal public health laboratories because of its greater genetic resolution when compared to PFGE, as well as its demonstrated ability to improve source attribution. WGS is described as offering the ultimate resolution since each nucleotide in the genome can be queried and phylogenetic relationships can be inferred using well-established computational models. However, to achieve the full promise of this technology, large well-curated databases are required that harbor sequence and associated metadata from isolates collected at diverse locations and times. Such databases aid in source attribution, understanding the natural history of the organisms, and provide a valuable resource for data mining. One such database is curated by the GenomeTrakr Network. The immediate goal of this project is to add two thousand unique and diverse draft genomes from food and environmental bacterial pathogens to this database over the next five years. This will be accomplished by sequencing well-characterized isolates from the Wadsworth Center and other institutions and sharing the sequence and metadata with the GenomeTrakr network and the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) in real-time. The expected outcome of this project will be to expand the GenomeTrakr database of high-quality scaffold genomes that are linked to metadata. This will allow more accurate subtyping to link patient pathogens to specific foods or environmental sources and ultimately reduce pathogen-borne illness.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10173143
Project number
1U19FD007089-01
Recipient
WADSWORTH CENTER
Principal Investigator
WILLIAM J WOLFGANG
Activity code
U19
Funding institute
FDA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$138,091
Award type
1
Project period
2020-09-01 → 2025-06-30