About this Research Topic
The advances in genome sequence technologies have improved the ability to track and understand the bacterial and viral transmission of animal diseases. Phylogenetic analysis of these genomes can be used to clarify the key questions in infectious disease epidemiology, from the initial detection and characterization of outbreak viruses to transmission chain tracking and outbreak mapping, which can now be much more accurately addressed using recent advances in virus sequencing and phylogenetics. The threat of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases continues to be a challenge to public and global health security as well as animal health, and highlights that sequencing is not just a critical tool in bio-surveillance, it can also play a major role in pandemic or outbreak response.
The scope of the Research Topic is to explore the current status and future perspectives of sequencing technologies in the control and prevention of infectious diseases, including the elucidation of diagnosis, molecular evolution, distribution, and transmission of important veterinary infectious diseases. The collection welcomes, but is not limited to, Original Research, Methods, and Reviews in the following areas:
- Molecular surveillance of specific infections at the local, national, and international levels;
- Rapid detection and characterization of emerging pathogens;
- Whole and partial genome sequencing of viral and bacterial isolates;
- Short- and long-read sequencing approaches for infectious diseases control and prevention;
- Development of new bioinformatic tools for NGS data analysis.
Volume I: Sequencing and Phylogenetic Analysis as a Tool in Molecular Epidemiology of Veterinary Infectious Diseases
Keywords: sequencing, whole genome sequencing, WGS, next-generation sequencing, NGS, phylogenetic analysis, bioinformatics analysis, metagenomics, molecular surveillance, epidemiology, evolution, infectious disease
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.