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The Sorcerer II Global Ocean Sampling expedition: expanding the universe of protein families

Authors :
Aaron L. Halpern
Shannon J. Williamson
Kannan Natarajan
Susan S. Taylor
Granger G. Sutton
Marcin P. Joachimiak
David Eisenberg
Robert Friedman
Christopher S. Miller
Gerard Manning
Shibu Yooseph
David A W Soergel
Christopher van Belle
Douglas B. Rusch
Karin A. Remington
Steven E. Brenner
Jack E. Dixon
Yufeng Zhai
Robert L. Strausberg
Karla B. Heidelberg
Vineet Bafna
Jonathan A. Eisen
Shaun W. Lee
Weizhong Li
Piotr Cieplak
John-Marc Chandonia
Huiying Li
Benjamin J. Raphael
J. Craig Venter
Susan T. Mashiyama
Lukasz Jaroszewski
Marvin Frazier
Adam Godzik
Source :
PLoS biology, vol 5, iss 3, Yooseph, Shibu; Sutton, Granger; Rusch, Douglas B.; Halpern, Aaron L.; Williamson, Shannon J.; Remington, Karin; et al.(2006). The Sorcerer II Global Ocean Sampling Expedition: Expanding the Universe of Protein Families. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/8fc2549r, PLoS Biology, Vol 5, Iss 3, p e16 (2007)
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2007.

Abstract

Metagenomics projects based on shotgun sequencing of populations of micro-organisms yield insight into protein families. We used sequence similarity clustering to explore proteins with a comprehensive dataset consisting of sequences from available databases together with 6.12 million proteins predicted from an assembly of 7.7 million Global Ocean Sampling (GOS) sequences. The GOS dataset covers nearly all known prokaryotic protein families. A total of 3,995 medium- and large-sized clusters consisting of only GOS sequences are identified, out of which 1,700 have no detectable homology to known families. The GOS-only clusters contain a higher than expected proportion of sequences of viral origin, thus reflecting a poor sampling of viral diversity until now. Protein domain distributions in the GOS dataset and current protein databases show distinct biases. Several protein domains that were previously categorized as kingdom specific are shown to have GOS examples in other kingdoms. About 6,000 sequences (ORFans) from the literature that heretofore lacked similarity to known proteins have matches in the GOS data. The GOS dataset is also used to improve remote homology detection. Overall, besides nearly doubling the number of current proteins, the predicted GOS proteins also add a great deal of diversity to known protein families and shed light on their evolution. These observations are illustrated using several protein families, including phosphatases, proteases, ultraviolet-irradiation DNA damage repair enzymes, glutamine synthetase, and RuBisCO. The diversity added by GOS data has implications for choosing targets for experimental structure characterization as part of structural genomics efforts. Our analysis indicates that new families are being discovered at a rate that is linear or almost linear with the addition of new sequences, implying that we are still far from discovering all protein families in nature.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS biology, vol 5, iss 3, Yooseph, Shibu; Sutton, Granger; Rusch, Douglas B.; Halpern, Aaron L.; Williamson, Shannon J.; Remington, Karin; et al.(2006). The Sorcerer II Global Ocean Sampling Expedition: Expanding the Universe of Protein Families. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/8fc2549r, PLoS Biology, Vol 5, Iss 3, p e16 (2007)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c22e23a43cc20c19a92ab2f2a0a9bc8