Online Seminar:

jo-rhodes.jpgNanopore sequencing of a pathogenic fungi outbreak in a UK hospital

Speaker: Jo Rhodes, Faculty of Medicine, School of Public Health, Imperial College London
Date: 22 Feb 2017
Time: 3 pm (UK time), 4 pm (CET), 10 am (EST), 7 am (PST)

Abstract:
Candida auris is a globally emerging multidrug resistant fungal pathogen causing nosocomial transmission.  After the initial infection in April 2015 in a London cardio-thoracic center, we are now currently seeing the largest global outbreak of C. auris in an intensive care unit.  As such, a rapid response is required.  We investigated this outbreak by nanopore sequencing technology using the MinION™ from Oxford Nanopore Technologies to generate a reference genome; these data were integrated with whole-genome sequences, to place the outbreak into a global context, and identify the origin of this outbreak.  Nanopore sequencing also allowed rapid species identification and the acquisition of clinically relevant information within a short time frame, reducing the current hospital workflow by days.  The rapid availability of reliable clinical data in the C. auris outbreak enabled the identification of drug resistance mutations and transmission.

Speaker Bio
Jo Rhodes is a bioinformatician and molecular epidemiologist at Imperial College London. Currently, she is an early career research fellow attached to the Fisher and Armstrong-James groups, with links to clinical scientists at the Royal Brompton Hospital. She explores the use of genomics to diagnose and survey fungal infectious diseases. Recently, she has demonstrated the importance of mixed genotype infections of Cryptococcus in HIV patients in sub-Saharan Africa. She has also generated a reference genome on the MinION platform for a hospital outbreak of the emerging fungal pathogen Candida auris.

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