Published March 8, 2021 | Version 1
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Guidance document for WGS-Benchmarking

  • 1. ROR icon French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety
  • 1. ROR icon Istituto Superiore di Sanità
  • 2. ROR icon French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety
  • 3. ROR icon National Institute for Public Health and the Environment
  • 4. ROR icon Technical University of Denmark
  • 5. ROR icon National Veterinary Institute

Description

Whole genome sequencing (WGS) is increasingly used in diagnostics and surveillance of pathogenic microorganisms. Common applications for WGS is to use the data for the identification of pathogenic bacteria, antimicrobial resistance (AMR), virulence gene detection and during outbreak investigations. This guidance document presents how to benchmark the different WGS steps. A checklist was drafted for bacterial genome analysis using WGS technology that sets standards for the analytical wet lab (bench) process and bioinformatics analyses, also called "dry lab (bench)". In other words, bacterial WGS includes 2 steps:

  1. Analytical wet lab analyses;
  2. Bioinformatics analyses of reads obtained from sequencing.

The wet bench component generally includes any or all of the following steps: handling of isolates, DNA extraction, DNA fragmentation, barcoding (molecular indexing) of DNA fragments, enrichment of gene targets within certain panels, adapter ligation, amplification, library preparation, flow cell loading, and generation of sequence reads. Generation of reads is almost entirely automated and the output consists of millions to billions of short sequences (reads). The following dry bench workflow consists in intensive computational and bioinformatics analyses that use a variety of algorithms that, for instance, (i) map and align the short reads to a linear reference bacterial genome and/or (ii) perform de novo assembly.

The EURLs WG on NGS approached the analytic wet bench process and the bioinformatics analyses (''dry bench'') as two discrete processes requiring separate considerations for standards.

The EURLs WG have shared a survey to their NRLs network to ask them for different parameters used in the wet and dry lab part of WGS in their laboratories. These parameters are used in this guidance to present the different steps of WGS.

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NGS EURL WG - Del5 - Benchmarking.pdf

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Dates

Valid
2021-03-08