Publication | Open Access
Petabase-scale sequence alignment catalyses viral discovery
56
Citations
99
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
δ VirusMolecular BiologyGenomicsSequence AlignmentCloud Computing InfrastructurePathogen DiscoveryAbstract PublicViral EvolutionVirus PhylogenySequence AnalysisPetabase-scale Sequence AlignmentVirologyVirus ClassificationFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsStructural BiologyEmerging Infectious DiseasesNatural SciencesComputational BiologyMicrobiologySystems BiologyMedicine
Abstract Public databases contain a planetary collection of nucleic acid sequences, but their systematic exploration has been inhibited by a lack of efficient methods for searching this corpus, now exceeding multiple petabases and growing exponentially [1, 2]. We developed a cloud computing infrastructure, Serratus , to enable ultra-high throughput sequence alignment at the petabase scale. We searched 5.7 million biologically diverse samples (10.2 petabases) for the hallmark gene RNA dependent RNA polymerase, identifying well over 10 5 novel RNA viruses and thereby expanding the number of known species by roughly an order of magnitude. We characterised novel viruses related to coronaviruses and to hepatitis δ virus, respectively and explored their environmental reservoirs. To catalyse a new era of viral discovery, we established a free and comprehensive database of these data and tools. Expanding the known sequence diversity of viruses can reveal the evolutionary origins of emerging pathogens and improve pathogen surveillance for the anticipation and mitigation of future pandemics.
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