| Literature DB >> 28337070 |
Scott Tighe1, Ebrahim Afshinnekoo2, Tara M Rock3, Ken McGrath4, Noah Alexander5, Alexa McIntyre5, Sofia Ahsanuddin5, Daniela Bezdan5, Stefan J Green6, Samantha Joye7, Sarah Stewart Johnson8, Don A Baldwin9, Nathan Bivens10, Nadim Ajami11, Joseph R Carmical11, Ian Charold Herriott12, Rita Colwell13, Mohamed Donia14, Jonathan Foox15, Nick Greenfield16, Tim Hunter1, Jessica Hoffman1, Joshua Hyman17, Ellen Jorgensen18, Diana Krawczyk19, Jodie Lee20, Shawn Levy21, Natàlia Garcia-Reyero22, Matthew Settles23, Kelley Thomas24, Felipe Gómez25, Lynn Schriml26, Nikos Kyrpides27, Elena Zaikova8, Jon Penterman28, Christopher E Mason29.
Abstract
The Extreme Microbiome Project (XMP) is a project launched by the Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities Metagenomics Research Group (ABRF MGRG) that focuses on whole genome shotgun sequencing of extreme and unique environments using a wide variety of biomolecular techniques. The goals are multifaceted, including development and refinement of new techniques for the following: 1) the detection and characterization of novel microbes, 2) the evaluation of nucleic acid techniques for extremophilic samples, and 3) the identification and implementation of the appropriate bioinformatics pipelines. Here, we highlight the different ongoing projects that we have been working on, as well as details on the various methods we use to characterize the microbiome and metagenome of these complex samples. In particular, we present data of a novel multienzyme extraction protocol that we developed, called Polyzyme or MetaPolyZyme. Presently, the XMP is characterizing sample sites around the world with the intent of discovering new species, genes, and gene clusters. Once a project site is complete, the resulting data will be publically available. Sites include Lake Hillier in Western Australia, the "Door to Hell" crater in Turkmenistan, deep ocean brine lakes of the Gulf of Mexico, deep ocean sediments from Greenland, permafrost tunnels in Alaska, ancient microbial biofilms from Antarctica, Blue Lagoon Iceland, Ethiopian toxic hot springs, and the acidic hypersaline ponds in Western Australia.Entities:
Keywords: Polyzyme; extremophile; metagenomics; shotgun sequencing; whole genome
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28337070 PMCID: PMC5345951 DOI: 10.7171/jbt.17-2801-004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol Tech ISSN: 1524-0215