Metagenomic Analysis of Microdissected Valvular Tissue for Etiological Diagnosis of Blood Culture-Negative Endocarditis

Clin Infect Dis. 2020 May 23;70(11):2405-2412. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciz655.

Abstract

Background: Etiological diagnosis is a key to therapeutic adaptation and improved prognosis, particularly for infections such as endocarditis. In blood culture-negative endocarditis (BCNE), 22% of cases remain undiagnosed despite an updated comprehensive syndromic approach. This prompted us to develop a new diagnostic approach.

Methods: Eleven valves from 10 BCNE patients were analyzed using a method that combines human RNA bait-depletion with phi29 DNA polymerase-based multiple displacement amplification and shotgun DNA sequencing. An additional case in which a microbe was serendipitously visualized by immunofluorescence was analyzed using the same method, but after laser capture microdissection.

Results: Background DNA prevented any diagnosis in cases analyzed without microdissection because the majority of sequences were contaminants. Moraxella sequences were dramatically enriched in the stained microdissected region of the additional case. A consensus genome sequence of 2.4 Mbp covering more than 94% of the Moraxella osloensis KSH reference genome was reconstructed with 234X average coverage. Several antibiotic-resistance genes were observed. Etiological diagnosis was confirmed using Western blot and specific polymerase chain reaction with sequencing on a different valve sample.

Conclusions: Microdissection could be a key to the metagenomic diagnosis of infectious diseases when a microbe is visualized but remains unidentified despite an updated optimal approach. Moraxella osloensis should be tested in blood culture-negative endocarditis.

Keywords: Moraxella osloensis; blood culture–negative endocarditis; human RNA bait-depletion; laser capture microdissection.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Blood Culture
  • Endocarditis* / diagnosis
  • Endocarditis, Bacterial* / diagnosis
  • Humans
  • Metagenomics
  • Moraxella

Supplementary concepts

  • Moraxella osloensis