Author: Bauer, Denis C.; Tay, Aidan P.; Wilson, Laurence O. W.; Reti, Daniel; Hosking, Cameron; McAuley, Alexander J.; Pharo, Elizabeth; Todd, Shawn; Stevens, Vicky; Neave, Matthew J.; Tachedjian, Mary; Drew, Trevor W.; Vasan, Seshadri S.
Title: Supporting pandemic response using genomics and bioinformatics: A case study on the emergent SARSâ€CoVâ€2 outbreak Cord-id: k8m19by9 Document date: 2020_5_25
ID: k8m19by9
Snippet: Preâ€clinical responses to fastâ€moving infectious disease outbreaks heavily depend on choosing the best isolates for animal models that inform diagnostics, vaccines and treatments. Current approaches are driven by practical considerations (e.g. first available virus isolate) rather than a detailed analysis of the characteristics of the virus strain chosen, which can lead to animal models that are not representative of the circulating or emerging clusters. Here, we suggest a combination of epi
Document: Preâ€clinical responses to fastâ€moving infectious disease outbreaks heavily depend on choosing the best isolates for animal models that inform diagnostics, vaccines and treatments. Current approaches are driven by practical considerations (e.g. first available virus isolate) rather than a detailed analysis of the characteristics of the virus strain chosen, which can lead to animal models that are not representative of the circulating or emerging clusters. Here, we suggest a combination of epidemiological, experimental and bioinformatic considerations when choosing virus strains for animal model generation. We discuss the currently chosen SARSâ€CoVâ€2 strains for international coronavirus disease (COVIDâ€19) models in the context of their phylogeny as well as in a novel alignmentâ€free bioinformatic approach. Unlike phylogenetic trees, which focus on individual shared mutations, this new approach assesses genomeâ€wide coâ€developing functionalities and hence offers a more fluid view of the ‘cloud of variances’ that RNA viruses are prone to accumulate. This joint approach concludes that while the current animal models cover the existing viral strains adequately, there is substantial evolutionary activity that is likely not considered by the current models. Based on insights from the nonâ€discrete alignmentâ€free approach and experimental observations, we suggest isolates for future animal models.
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