Deep sequencing of RNA from blood and oral swab samples reveals the presence of nucleic acid from a number of pathogens in patients with acute Ebola virus disease and is consistent with bacterial translocation across the gut

  • Carroll, MW
  • Haldenby, S
  • Rickett, NY
  • Pályi, B
  • Garcia-Dorival, I
  • Liu, X
  • Barker, G
  • Bore, JA
  • Koundouno, FR
  • Williamson, ED
  • Laws, TR
  • Kerber, R
  • Sissoko, D
  • Magyar, N
  • Di Caro, A
  • Biava, M
  • Fletcher, TE
  • Sprecher, A
  • Ng, LFP
  • Rénia, L
  • Magassouba, N
  • Günther, S
  • Wölfel, R
  • Stoecker, K
  • Matthews, DA
  • Hiscox, JA
Publication date
August 2017
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology

Abstract

© 2017 Carroll et al. In this study, samples from the 2013-2016 West African Ebola virus outbreak from patients in Guinea with Ebola virus disease (EVD) were analyzed to discover and classify what other pathogens were present. Throat swabs were taken from deceased EVD patients, and peripheral blood samples were analyzed that had been taken from patients when they presented at the treatment center with acute illness. High-throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) and bioinformatics were used to identify the potential microorganisms. This approach confirmed Ebola virus (EBOV) in all samples from patients diagnosed as acute positive for the virus by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR in deployed field laboratories. Nucleic acid mapping to Plasmo...

Extracted data

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