scholarly journals OperonDB: a comprehensive database of predicted operons in microbial genomes

2009 ◽  
Vol 37 (Database) ◽  
pp. D479-D482 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Pertea ◽  
K. Ayanbule ◽  
M. Smedinghoff ◽  
S. L. Salzberg
Author(s):  
Maria A. Sierra ◽  
Chandrima Bhattacharya ◽  
Krista Ryon ◽  
Sophie Meierovich ◽  
Heba Shaaban ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Microbe Directory (TMD) is a comprehensive database of annotations for microbial species collating features such as gram-stain, capsid-symmetry, resistance to antibiotics and more. This work presents a significant improvement to the original Microbe Directory (2018). This update adds 68,852 taxa, many new annotation features, an interface for the statistical analysis of microbiomes based on TMD features, and presents a portal for the broad community to add or correct entries. This update also adds curated lists of gene annotations which are useful for characterizing microbial genomes. Much of the new data in TMD is sourced from a set of databases and independent studies collating these data into a single quality controlled and curated source. This will allow researchers and clinicians to have easier access to microbial data and provide for the possibility of serendipitous discovery of otherwise unexpected trends.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven L. Salzberg ◽  
Derrick E. Wood

Ten years ago, the dramatic rise in the number of microbial genomes led to an inflection point, when the approach of finding short, exact matches in a comprehensive database became just as accurate as older, slower approaches. The new idea led to a method that was hundreds of times times faster than those that came before. Today, exact k-mer matching is a standard technique at the heart of many microbiome analysis tools.


Author(s):  
Shweta Singh Chauhan ◽  
Deepak Kumar Sachan ◽  
Ramakrishnan Parthasarathi

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (S10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenmiao Zhang ◽  
Lu Zhang

Abstract Background Due to the complexity of microbial communities, de novo assembly on next generation sequencing data is commonly unable to produce complete microbial genomes. Metagenome assembly binning becomes an essential step that could group the fragmented contigs into clusters to represent microbial genomes based on contigs’ nucleotide compositions and read depths. These features work well on the long contigs, but are not stable for the short ones. Contigs can be linked by sequence overlap (assembly graph) or by the paired-end reads aligned to them (PE graph), where the linked contigs have high chance to be derived from the same clusters. Results We developed METAMVGL, a multi-view graph-based metagenomic contig binning algorithm by integrating both assembly and PE graphs. It could strikingly rescue the short contigs and correct the binning errors from dead ends. METAMVGL learns the two graphs’ weights automatically and predicts the contig labels in a uniform multi-view label propagation framework. In experiments, we observed METAMVGL made use of significantly more high-confidence edges from the combined graph and linked dead ends to the main graph. It also outperformed many state-of-the-art contig binning algorithms, including MaxBin2, MetaBAT2, MyCC, CONCOCT, SolidBin and GraphBin on the metagenomic sequencing data from simulation, two mock communities and Sharon infant fecal samples. Conclusions Our findings demonstrate METAMVGL outstandingly improves the short contig binning and outperforms the other existing contig binning tools on the metagenomic sequencing data from simulation, mock communities and infant fecal samples.


2020 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 126100
Author(s):  
María Dolores Ramos-Barbero ◽  
Ana-B. Martin-Cuadrado ◽  
Tomeu Viver ◽  
Fernando Santos ◽  
Manuel Martinez-Garcia ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Glendinning ◽  
Buğra Genç ◽  
R. John Wallace ◽  
Mick Watson

AbstractThe rumen microbiota comprises a community of microorganisms which specialise in the degradation of complex carbohydrates from plant-based feed. These microbes play a highly important role in ruminant nutrition and could also act as sources of industrially useful enzymes. In this study, we performed a metagenomic analysis of samples taken from the ruminal contents of cow (Bos Taurus), sheep (Ovis aries), reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) and red deer (Cervus elaphus). We constructed 391 metagenome-assembled genomes originating from 16 microbial phyla. We compared our genomes to other publically available microbial genomes and found that they contained 279 novel species. We also found significant differences between the microbiota of different ruminant species in terms of the abundance of microbial taxonomies, carbohydrate-active enzyme genes and KEGG orthologs. We present a dataset of rumen-derived genomes which in combination with other publicly-available rumen genomes can be used as a reference dataset in future metagenomic studies.


Database ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinding Liu ◽  
Dongbo Wang ◽  
Yinna Su ◽  
Kun Lang ◽  
Rongjing Duan ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 2265-2276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Otto G. Berg ◽  
C. G. Kurland
Keyword(s):  

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