| Literature DB >> 28155666 |
Chao Xie1,2, Chin Lui Wesley Goi3, Daniel H Huson4,5, Peter F R Little3,5,6, Rohan B H Williams3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Taxonomic profiling of microbial communities is often performed using small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU) amplicon sequencing (16S or 18S), while environmental shotgun sequencing is often focused on functional analysis. Large shotgun datasets contain a significant number of SSU sequences and these can be exploited to perform an unbiased SSU--based taxonomic analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Microbial community profiling; Microbial ecology; Sequence analysis; Short subunit ribosomal RNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28155666 PMCID: PMC5259810 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-016-1378-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1Schematic representation of RiboTagger detection scheme. Starting with shotgun sequencing reads from (either gDNA or cDNA) RiboTagger procedes as follows; (1) all reads are screened using PSSMs for the presence of a conserved recognition sequence (blue arrowed rectangles) adjacent to V-regions using a cohort of pre-defined recognition profiles; (2) for reads that are positive for recognition sequences, the adjacent V-region tag sequence is extracted, assuming if sufficient length is available (dashed blue rectangles denote in sufficient length in the tag sequence); and (3) for related tag sequences, equivalent coordinates are defined, prior to counting and annotation
Fig. 2Universal recognition profiles for each of the variable regions V4--V7 used to target bacteria (B), archaea (A) and eukaryotes (E), respectively, with corresponding observed sensitivities and false positive rates
Fig. 3Percentage of V4 ribotags with a given range of concordance for different taxonomic ranks as () annotated in the Greengenes database and (b) as measured against Greengenes de novo OTU clusters as a function of cluster formation threshold