Publication | Open Access
Recovery of genomes from metagenomes via a dereplication, aggregation, and scoring strategy
171
Citations
38
References
2017
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringDas ToolGeneticsMolecular BiologyGenomicsMicrobial EvolutionHigh Throughput SequencingAbstract Microbial CommunitiesMolecular EcologyComputational GenomicsGenome AnalysisMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobial DiversityOmicsHost-microbe BiologyMicrobiomeBioinformaticsAutomated MethodFunctional GenomicsBiologyMicrobial SystematicsNext-generation SequencingComputational BiologyMicrobiologySystems BiologyMedicineSequence Assembly
Abstract Microbial communities are critical to ecosystem function. A key objective of metagenomic studies is to analyse organism-specific metabolic pathways and reconstruct community interaction networks. This requires accurate assignment of assembled genome fragments to genomes. Existing binning methods often fail to reconstruct a reasonable number of genomes and report many bins of low quality and completeness. Furthermore, the performance of existing algorithms varies between samples and biotopes. Here, we present a dereplication, aggregation and scoring strategy, DAS Tool, that combines the strengths of a flexible set of established binning algorithms. DAS Tool applied to a constructed community generated more accurate bins than any automated method. Further, when applied to environmental and host-associated samples of different complexity, DAS Tool recovered substantially more near-complete genomes, including novel lineages, than any single binning method alone. The ability to reconstruct many near-complete genomes from metagenomics data will greatly advance genome-centric analyses of ecosystems.
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