Litcius/Paper detail

Hidden Viral Sequences in Public Sequencing Data and Warning for Future Emerging Diseases

Junna Kawasaki, Shohei Kojima, Keizō Tomonaga, Masayuki Horie

2021mBio39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Monitoring the spread of viral infections and identifying novel viruses capable of infecting humans through animal reservoirs are necessary to control emerging viral diseases. Massive amounts of sequencing data collected from various animals are publicly available, and these data may contain sequences originating from a wide variety of viruses. Here, we analyzed more than 46,000 public sequencing data and identified approximately 900 hidden RNA viral infections in mammalian and avian samples. Some viruses discovered in this study were genetically similar to pathogens that cause hepatitis, diarrhea, or encephalitis in humans, suggesting the presence of new threats to public health. Our study demonstrates the effectiveness of reusing public sequencing data to identify known and unknown viral infections, indicating that future continuous monitoring of public sequencing data by metagenomic analyses would help prepare and mitigate future viral pandemics.

Topics & Concepts

Computational biologyBiologyVirologyData scienceComputer scienceAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyZoonotic diseases and public healthViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology