IDseq—An open source cloud-based pipeline and analysis service for metagenomic pathogen detection and monitoring

KL Kalantar, T Carvalho, CFA de Bourcy… - …, 2020 - academic.oup.com
KL Kalantar, T Carvalho, CFA de Bourcy, B Dimitrov, G Dingle, R Egger, J Han, OB Holmes…
Gigascience, 2020academic.oup.com
Background Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) has enabled the rapid,
unbiased detection and identification of microbes without pathogen-specific reagents,
culturing, or a priori knowledge of the microbial landscape. mNGS data analysis requires a
series of computationally intensive processing steps to accurately determine the microbial
composition of a sample. Existing mNGS data analysis tools typically require bioinformatics
expertise and access to local server-class hardware resources. For many research …
Background
Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) has enabled the rapid, unbiased detection and identification of microbes without pathogen-specific reagents, culturing, or a priori knowledge of the microbial landscape. mNGS data analysis requires a series of computationally intensive processing steps to accurately determine the microbial composition of a sample. Existing mNGS data analysis tools typically require bioinformatics expertise and access to local server-class hardware resources. For many research laboratories, this presents an obstacle, especially in resource-limited environments.
Findings
We present IDseq, an open source cloud-based metagenomics pipeline and service for global pathogen detection and monitoring (https://idseq.net). The IDseq Portal accepts raw mNGS data, performs host and quality filtration steps, then executes an assembly-based alignment pipeline, which results in the assignment of reads and contigs to taxonomic categories. The taxonomic relative abundances are reported and visualized in an easy-to-use web application to facilitate data interpretation and hypothesis generation. Furthermore, IDseq supports environmental background model generation and automatic internal spike-in control recognition, providing statistics that are critical for data interpretation. IDseq was designed with the specific intent of detecting novel pathogens. Here, we benchmark novel virus detection capability using both synthetically evolved viral sequences and real-world samples, including IDseq analysis of a nasopharyngeal swab sample acquired and processed locally in Cambodia from a tourist from Wuhan, China, infected with the recently emergent SARS-CoV-2.
Conclusion
The IDseq Portal reduces the barrier to entry for mNGS data analysis and enables bench scientists, clinicians, and bioinformaticians to gain insight from mNGS datasets for both known and novel pathogens.
Oxford University Press