Annotation of metagenome short reads using proxygenes
1Biological Data Management and Technology Center, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, 2Genome Biology Program, DOE Joint Genome Institute, 2800 Mitchell Dr, Walnut Creek and 3Microbial Ecology Program, DOE Joint Genome Institute, 2800 Mitchell Dr, Walnut Creek, CA 94598, USA
*To whom correspondence should be addressed.
| Abstract |
|---|
Motivation: A typical metagenome dataset generated using a 454 pyrosequencing platform consists of short reads sampled from the collective genome of a microbial community. The amount of sequence in such datasets is usually insufficient for assembly, and traditional gene prediction cannot be applied to unassembled short reads. As a result, analysis of such datasets usually involves comparisons in terms of relative abundances of various protein families. The latter requires assignment of individual reads to protein families, which is hindered by the fact that short reads contain only a fragment, usually small, of a protein.
Results: We have considered the assignment of pyrosequencing reads to protein families directly using RPS-BLAST against COG and Pfam databases and indirectly via proxygenes that are identified using BLASTx searches against protein sequence databases. Using simulated metagenome datasets as benchmarks, we show that the proxygene method is more accurate than the direct assignment. We introduce a clustering method which significantly reduces the size of a metagenome dataset while maintaining a faithful representation of its functional and taxonomic content.
Contact: vmmarkowitz{at}lbl.gov
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. Hamady and R. Knight Microbial community profiling for human microbiome projects: Tools, techniques, and challenges Genome Res., July 1, 2009; 19(7): 1141 - 1152. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
