Literature DB >> 28281028

A proposal for a portal to make earth's microbial diversity easily accessible and searchable.

Boris A Vinatzer1, Long Tian2,3, Lenwood S Heath4.   

Abstract

Estimates of the number of bacterial species range from 107 to 1012. At the pace at which descriptions of new species are currently being published, the description of all bacterial species on earth will only be completed in thousands of years. However, even if one day all species were named and described, these names and descriptions would still be of little practical value unless they could be easily searched and accessed, so that novel strains could be easily identified as members of any of these species. To complicate the situation further, many of the currently known species contain significant genotypic and phenotypic diversity that would still be missed if description of microbial diversity were limited to species. The solution to this problem could be a database in which every bacterial species and every intra-specific group is anchored to a genome-similarity framework. This ideal database should be searchable using complete or partial genome sequences as well as phenotypes. Moreover, the database should include functions to easily add newly sequenced novel strains, automatically place them into the genome-similarity framework, identify them as members of an already named species, or tag them as members of yet to be described species or new intra-specific groups. Here, we propose the means to develop such a database by taking advantage of the concept of genome sequence similarity-based codes, called Life Identification Numbers or LINs.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Average nucleotide identity; Bacterial species; Database; Genome sequences

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28281028     DOI: 10.1007/s10482-017-0849-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek        ISSN: 0003-6072            Impact factor:   2.271


  6 in total

Review 1.  Global Organization and Proposed Megataxonomy of the Virus World.

Authors:  Eugene V Koonin; Valerian V Dolja; Mart Krupovic; Arvind Varsani; Yuri I Wolf; Natalya Yutin; F Murilo Zerbini; Jens H Kuhn
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2020-03-04       Impact factor: 11.056

2.  Could a Focus on the "Why" of Taxonomy Help Taxonomy Better Respond to the Needs of Science and Society?

Authors:  Leighton Pritchard; C Titus Brown; Bailey Harrington; Lenwood S Heath; N Tessa Pierce-Ward; Boris A Vinatzer
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-05-19       Impact factor: 6.064

3.  LINflow: a computational pipeline that combines an alignment-free with an alignment-based method to accelerate generation of similarity matrices for prokaryotic genomes.

Authors:  Long Tian; Reza Mazloom; Lenwood S Heath; Boris A Vinatzer
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2021-03-24       Impact factor: 2.984

4.  Draft Genome Sequences of Four Streptomycin-Sensitive Erwinia amylovora Strains Isolated from Commercial Apple Orchards in Ohio.

Authors:  A M Jimenez Madrid; T Klass; V Roman-Reyna; J Jacobs; M L Lewis Ivey
Journal:  Microbiol Resour Announc       Date:  2021-12-16

5.  A Dual Barcoding Approach to Bacterial Strain Nomenclature: Genomic Taxonomy of Klebsiella pneumoniae Strains.

Authors:  Melanie Hennart; Julien Guglielmini; Sébastien Bridel; Martin C J Maiden; Keith A Jolley; Alexis Criscuolo; Sylvain Brisse
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2022-07-02       Impact factor: 8.800

6.  LINbase: a web server for genome-based identification of prokaryotes as members of crowdsourced taxa.

Authors:  Long Tian; Chengjie Huang; Reza Mazloom; Lenwood S Heath; Boris A Vinatzer
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2020-07-02       Impact factor: 16.971

  6 in total

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