| Literature DB >> 32626849 |
Weili Wang1, Jie Ren1, Kujin Tang1, Emily Dart2, Julio Cesar Ignacio-Espinoza3, Jed A Fuhrman3, Jonathan Braun4, Fengzhu Sun1, Nathan A Ahlgren2.
Abstract
Metagenomic sequencing has greatly enhanced the discovery of viral genomic sequences; however, it remains challenging to identify the host(s) of these new viruses. We developed VirHostMatcher-Net, a flexible, network-based, Markov random field framework for predicting virus-prokaryote interactions using multiple, integrated features: CRISPR sequences and alignment-free similarity measures ([Formula: see text] and WIsH). Evaluation of this method on a benchmark set of 1462 known virus-prokaryote pairs yielded host prediction accuracy of 59% and 86% at the genus and phylum levels, representing 16-27% and 6-10% improvement, respectively, over previous single-feature prediction approaches. We applied our host prediction tool to crAssphage, a human gut phage, and two metagenomic virus datasets: marine viruses and viral contigs recovered from globally distributed, diverse habitats. Host predictions were frequently consistent with those of previous studies, but more importantly, this new tool made many more confident predictions than previous tools, up to nearly 3-fold more (n > 27 000), greatly expanding the diversity of known virus-host interactions.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32626849 PMCID: PMC7324143 DOI: 10.1093/nargab/lqaa044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NAR Genom Bioinform ISSN: 2631-9268