1. Prediction of effective genome size in metagenomic samples
- Author
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Raes, J, Korbel, J O, Lercher, M J, von Mering, C, Bork, P, University of Zurich, and Bork, P
- Subjects
1307 Cell Biology ,1105 Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,1311 Genetics ,Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,U7 Systems Biology / Functional Genomics ,10124 Institute of Molecular Life Sciences - Abstract
We introduce a novel computational approach to predict effective genome size (EGS - a measure that includes multiple plasmid copies, inserted sequences and associated phages and viruses) from short sequencing reads of environmental genomics (or metagenomics) projects. We observe considerable EGS differences between environments and link this with ecological complexity as well as species composition (i.e. eukaryotes). For example, we estimate EGS in a complex, organism-dense farm soil sample at about 6.3 Mb whereas that of the bacteria therein is only 4.7 Mb; for bacteria in a nutrient-poor, organism-sparse ocean surface water sample, EGS is as low as 1.6 Mb. The method also permits evaluation of completion status and assembly bias in single-genome sequencing projects.
- Published
- 2007
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