2.
Accurate and universal delineation of prokaryotic species.
Nat Methods.
2013 Sep 28; 10(9): 881-4. Epub 2013 Jul 28; PubMed:
23892899.Abstract + PDF
The exponentially increasing number of sequenced genomes necessitates fast, accurate, universally applicable and automated approaches for the delineation of prokaryotic species. We developed specI (species identification tool; http://www.bork.embl.de/software/specI/), a method to group organisms into species clusters based on 40 universal, single-copy phylogenetic marker genes. Applied to 3,496 prokaryotic genomes, specI identified 1,753 species clusters. Of 314 discrepancies with a widely used taxonomic classification, >62% were resolved by literature support.
1.
Metagenomic species profiling using universal phylogenetic marker genes.
Sunagawa S,
Mende DR,
Zeller G, Izquierdo-Carrasco F, Berger SA,
Kultima JR,
Coelho LP,
Arumugam M,
Tap J, Nielsen HB, Rasmussen S, Brunak S, Pedersen O, Guarner F, de Vos WM, Wang J, Li J, Doré J, Ehrlich SD, Stamatakis A,
Bork P Nat Methods.
2013 Dec 20; 10(12): 1196-9. Epub 2013 Oct 20; PubMed:
24141494.Abstract + PDF
To quantify known and unknown microorganisms at species-level resolution using shotgun sequencing data, we developed a method that establishes metagenomic operational taxonomic units (mOTUs) based on single-copy phylogenetic marker genes. Applied to 252 human fecal samples, the method revealed that on average 43% of the species abundance and 58% of the richness cannot be captured by current reference genome-based methods. An implementation of the method is available at http://www.bork.embl.de/software/mOTU/.