Whole genome sequencing of hepatitis B virus using tiled amplicon (HEPTILE) and probe based enrichment on Illumina and Nanopore platforms

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) whole genome sequencing (WGS) is currently limited as the DNA viral loads (VL) of many clinical samples are below the threshold required to generate full genomes using current sequencing methods. We developed two pan-genotypic viral enrichment methods, using probe-based captu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lumley, SF, Kent, C, Jennings, D, Chai, H, Airey, G, Waddilove, E, Delphin, M, Trebes, A, McNaughton, AL, Mohammed, KS, Wilkinson, SAJ, Wu, Y, MacIntyre-Cockett, G, Kimono, B, Mbonye, KM, Ojambo, K, Maponga, TG, Tan, CCS, de Lara, C, Martin, J, Campbell, J, Van Schalkwyk, M, Goedhals, D, Newton, R, Barnes, E, Piazza, P, Ansari, MA
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Nature Research 2025
Description
Summary:Hepatitis B virus (HBV) whole genome sequencing (WGS) is currently limited as the DNA viral loads (VL) of many clinical samples are below the threshold required to generate full genomes using current sequencing methods. We developed two pan-genotypic viral enrichment methods, using probe-based capture and tiled amplicon PCR (HEP-TILE) for HBV WGS. We demonstrate using mock samples that both enrichment methods are pan-genotypic (genotypes A-J). Using clinical samples, we demonstrate that HEP-TILE amplification successfully amplifies full genomes at the lowest HBV VL tested (30 IU/ml), and the PCR products can be sequenced using both Nanopore and Illumina platforms. Probe-based capture with Illumina sequencing required VL > 300,000 IU/ml to generate full length HBV genomes. The capture-Illumina and HEP-TILE-Nanopore pipelines had consensus sequencing accuracy of 100% in mock samples with known DNA sequences. Together, these protocols will facilitate the generation of HBV sequence data, enabling a more accurate and representative picture of HBV molecular epidemiology, cast light on persistence and pathogenesis, and enhance understanding of the outcomes of infection and its treatment.