| Literature DB >> 35082445 |
Robert C Edgar1, Jeff Taylor2, Victor Lin3, Tomer Altman4, Pierre Barbera5, Dmitry Meleshko6,7, Dan Lohr8, Gherman Novakovsky9, Benjamin Buchfink10, Basem Al-Shayeb11, Jillian F Banfield12, Marcos de la Peña13, Anton Korobeynikov6,14, Rayan Chikhi15, Artem Babaian16.
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, which (at the time of writing) exceeds 20 petabases and is growing exponentially1. Here 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 and identified well over 105 novel RNA viruses, thereby expanding the number of known species by roughly an order of magnitude. We characterized novel viruses related to coronaviruses, hepatitis delta virus and huge phages, respectively, and analysed their environmental reservoirs. To catalyse the ongoing revolution 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.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35082445 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04332-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962