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Toward an Efficient Method of Identifying Core Genes for Evolutionary and Functional Microbial Phylogenies

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, September 2011
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Title
Toward an Efficient Method of Identifying Core Genes for Evolutionary and Functional Microbial Phylogenies
Published in
PLOS ONE, September 2011
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0024704
Pubmed ID
Authors

Nicola Segata, Curtis Huttenhower

Abstract

Microbial community metagenomes and individual microbial genomes are becoming increasingly accessible by means of high-throughput sequencing. Assessing organismal membership within a community is typically performed using one or a few taxonomic marker genes such as the 16S rDNA, and these same genes are also employed to reconstruct molecular phylogenies. There is thus a growing need to bioinformatically catalog strongly conserved core genes that can serve as effective taxonomic markers, to assess the agreement among phylogenies generated from different core gene, and to characterize the biological functions enriched within core genes and thus conserved throughout large microbial clades. We present a method to recursively identify core genes (i.e. genes ubiquitous within a microbial clade) in high-throughput from a large number of complete input genomes. We analyzed over 1,100 genomes to produce core gene sets spanning 2,861 bacterial and archaeal clades, ranging in size from one to >2,000 genes in inverse correlation with the α-diversity (total phylogenetic branch length) spanned by each clade. These cores are enriched as expected for housekeeping functions including translation, transcription, and replication, in addition to significant representations of regulatory, chaperone, and conserved uncharacterized proteins. In agreement with previous manually curated core gene sets, phylogenies constructed from one or more of these core genes agree with those built using 16S rDNA sequence similarity, suggesting that systematic core gene selection can be used to optimize both comparative genomics and determination of microbial community structure. Finally, we examine functional phylogenies constructed by clustering genomes by the presence or absence of orthologous gene families and show that they provide an informative complement to standard sequence-based molecular phylogenies.

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The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 248 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 13 5%
Sweden 2 <1%
Germany 2 <1%
Spain 2 <1%
Australia 1 <1%
Belgium 1 <1%
India 1 <1%
United Kingdom 1 <1%
Denmark 1 <1%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 224 90%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 67 27%
Researcher 52 21%
Student > Master 23 9%
Student > Doctoral Student 20 8%
Student > Postgraduate 13 5%
Other 47 19%
Unknown 26 10%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 123 50%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 35 14%
Computer Science 12 5%
Immunology and Microbiology 12 5%
Environmental Science 6 2%
Other 18 7%
Unknown 42 17%