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Identification, recovery, and refinement of hitherto undescribed population-level genomes from the human gastrointestinal tract

Authors :
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Eco-Systems Biology (Wilmes Group) [research center]
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Bioinformatics Core (R. Schneider Group) [research center]
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Medical Translational Research (J. Schneider Group) [research center]
Fonds National de la Recherche - FnR [sponsor]
Laczny, Cedric Christian
Muller, Emilie
Heintz, Anna
Herold, Malte
Lebrun, Laura
Hogan, Angela
May, Patrick
de Beaufort, Carine
Wilmes, Paul
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Eco-Systems Biology (Wilmes Group) [research center]
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Bioinformatics Core (R. Schneider Group) [research center]
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Medical Translational Research (J. Schneider Group) [research center]
Fonds National de la Recherche - FnR [sponsor]
Laczny, Cedric Christian
Muller, Emilie
Heintz, Anna
Herold, Malte
Lebrun, Laura
Hogan, Angela
May, Patrick
de Beaufort, Carine
Wilmes, Paul
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Linking taxonomic identity and functional potential at the population-level is important for the study of mixed microbial communities and is greatly facilitated by the availability of microbial reference genomes. While the culture-independent recovery of population-level genomes from environmental samples using the binning of metagenomic data has expanded available reference genome catalogs, several microbial lineages remain underrepresented. Here, we present two reference-independent approaches for the identification, recovery, and refinement of hitherto undescribed population-level genomes. The first approach is aimed at genome recovery of varied taxa and involves multi-sample automated binning using CANOPY CLUSTERING complemented by visualization and human-augmented binning using VIZBINpost hoc. The second approach is particularly well-suited for the study of specific taxa and employs VIZBINde novo. Using these approaches, we reconstructed a total of six population-level genomes of distinct and divergent representatives of the Alphaproteobacteria class, the Mollicutes class, the Clostridiales order, and the Melainabacteria class from human gastrointestinal tract-derived metagenomic data. Our results demonstrate that, while automated binning approaches provide great potential for large-scale studies of mixed microbial communities, these approaches should be complemented with informative visualizations because expert-driven inspection and refinements are critical for the recovery of high-quality population-level genomes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1135479880
Document Type :
Electronic Resource