Separating Putative Pathogens from Background Contamination with Principal Orthogonal Decomposition: Evidence for Leptospira in the Ugandan Neonatal Septisome
Steven J. Schiff, Julius Kiwanuka, Gina Riggio, Lan Nguyen, Kevin Mu,, Emily Sproul, Joel Bazira, Juliet Mwanga, Dickson Tumusiime, Eunice, Nyesigire, Nkangi Lwanga, Kaleb T. Bogale, Vivek Kapur, James Broach, Sarah, Morton, Benjamin C. Warf, Mary Poss

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel statistical method using principal orthogonal decomposition to distinguish true pathogens from background contamination in neonatal sepsis samples, revealing evidence of Leptospira infection in Ugandan newborns.
Contribution
The paper presents a new quantitative approach to separate background contamination from pathogens in 16S rRNA sequencing data, improving pathogen detection in neonatal sepsis.
Findings
Leptospira detected in some neonates within 48 hours of birth.
Leptospira found up to 28 days of age, indicating environmental exposure.
Method effectively distinguishes pathogens from contamination in small biological samples.
Abstract
Neonatal sepsis (NS) is responsible for over a 1 million yearly deaths worldwide. In the developing world NS is often treated without an identified microbial pathogen. Amplicon sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene can be used to identify organisms that are difficult to detect by routine microbiological methods. However, contaminating bacteria are ubiquitous in both hospital settings and research reagents, and must be accounted for to make effective use of these data. In the present study, we sequenced the bacterial 16S rRNA gene obtained from blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 80 neonates presenting with NS to the Mbarara Regional Hospital in Uganda. Assuming that patterns of background contamination would be independent of pathogenic microorganism DNA, we applied a novel quantitative approach using principal orthogonal decomposition to separate background contamination from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLeptospirosis research and findings · Yersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites research · Bacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing
