High-throughput functional trait testing for bacterial pathogens

  • Stromberg Z
  • Phillips S
  • Omberg K
  • et al.
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Abstract

Functional traits are characteristics that affect the fitness and metabolic function of a microorganism. There is growing interest in using high-throughput methods to characterize bacterial pathogens based on functional virulence traits. Traditional methods that phenotype a single organism for a single virulence trait can be time consuming and labor intensive. Alternatively, machine learning of whole-genome sequences (WGS) has shown some success in predicting virulence. However, relying solely on WGS can miss functional traits, particularly for organisms lacking classical virulence factors. We propose that high-throughput assays for functional virulence trait identification should become a prominent method of characterizing bacterial pathogens on a population scale. This work is critical as we move from compiling lists of bacterial species associated with disease to pathogen-agnostic approaches capable of detecting novel microbes. We discuss six key areas of functional trait testing and how advancing high-throughput methods could provide a greater understanding of pathogens.

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Stromberg, Z. R., Phillips, S. M. B., Omberg, K. M., & Hess, B. M. (2023). High-throughput functional trait testing for bacterial pathogens. MSphere, 8(5). https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00315-23

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