1. RefSeq and the prokaryotic genome annotation pipeline in the age of metagenomes.
- Author
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Haft DH, Badretdin A, Coulouris G, DiCuccio M, Durkin AS, Jovenitti E, Li W, Mersha M, O'Neill KR, Virothaisakun J, and Thibaud-Nissen F
- Subjects
- Genome, Archaeal genetics, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Internet, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Proteins genetics, Archaea genetics, Bacteria genetics, Databases, Nucleic Acid standards, Databases, Nucleic Acid trends, Metagenome
- Abstract
The Reference Sequence (RefSeq) project at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) contains over 315 000 bacterial and archaeal genomes and 236 million proteins with up-to-date and consistent annotation. In the past 3 years, we have expanded the diversity of the RefSeq collection by including the best quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) submitted to INSDC (DDBJ, ENA and GenBank), while maintaining its quality by adding validation checks. Assemblies are now more stringently evaluated for contamination and for completeness of annotation prior to acceptance into RefSeq. MAGs now account for over 17000 assemblies in RefSeq, split over 165 orders and 362 families. Changes in the Prokaryotic Genome Annotation Pipeline (PGAP), which is used to annotate nearly all RefSeq assemblies include better detection of protein-coding genes. Nearly 83% of RefSeq proteins are now named by a curated Protein Family Model, a 4.7% increase in the past three years ago. In addition to literature citations, Enzyme Commission numbers, and gene symbols, Gene Ontology terms are now assigned to 48% of RefSeq proteins, allowing for easier multi-genome comparison. RefSeq is found at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/. PGAP is available as a stand-alone tool able to produce GenBank-ready files at https://github.com/ncbi/pgap., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research 2023.)
- Published
- 2024
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