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Recovery of genomes from metagenomes via a dereplication, aggregation and scoring strategy

Christian M. K. SieberDepartment of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USAAlexander J. ProbstDepartment of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USAAllison SharrarDepartment of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USABrian C. ThomasDepartment of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USAMatthias HessDepartment of Animal Science, University of California, Davis, CA, USASusannah G. TringeDepartment of Energy, Joint Genome Institute, Walnut Creek, CA, USA. [email protected]Jillian F. BanfieldDepartment of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. [email protected]
2018en
ABI

Abstract

Microbial communities are critical to ecosystem function. A key objective of metagenomic studies is to analyse organism-specific metabolic pathways and reconstruct community interaction networks. This requires accurate assignment of assembled genome fragments to genomes. Existing binning methods often fail to reconstruct a reasonable number of genomes and report many bins of low quality and completeness. Furthermore, the performance of existing algorithms varies between samples and biotopes. Here, we present a dereplication, aggregation and scoring strategy, DAS Tool, that combines the strengths of a flexible set of established binning algorithms. DAS Tool applied to a constructed community generated more accurate bins than any automated method. Indeed, when applied to environmental and host-associated samples of different complexity, DAS Tool recovered substantially more near-complete genomes, including previously unreported lineages, than any single binning method alone. The ability to reconstruct many near-complete genomes from metagenomics data will greatly advance genome-centric analyses of ecosystems.

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