Human outbreak detection and best practice MPXV analysis and interpretation with squirrel

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Abstract

High numbers of reported mpox cases and recent identification of multiple sustained human outbreaks of MPXV have highlighted the need for robust, best-practice genomic surveillance tools. In light of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, many labs across the globe developed the capacity to do virus genome sequencing, however MPXV presents additional analytical challenges due to its large genome size, tracts of low-complexity or repeat regions, genetically distinct clades, and the need to perform bespoke APOBEC3-mutation reconstruction. We present squirrel (Some Quick Reconstruction to Resolve Evolutionary Links), an open source bioinformatic tool that can perform clade-aware alignment, mutation quality assessment, phylogenetic inference and automated APOBEC3-mutation classification on branches of the phylogeny. Squirrel can be run on the command line or launched through the EPI2ME GUI through the squirrel-nf workflow, enabling robust analysis without need for the command line. With the interactive output report produced and publication-ready APOBEC3-reconstruction visualisation, squirrel enables researchers to distinguish between zoonotic and sustained human outbreaks and help accurately inform public health responses.

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