98%
921
2 minutes
20
In environmental metagenomic experiments, a very high proportion of the microbial sequencing data (> 70%) remains largely unexploited because rare and closely related genomes are missed in short-read assemblies. The identity and the potential metabolisms of a large fraction of natural microbial communities thus remain inaccessible to researchers. The purpose of this study was to explore the genomic content of unassembled metagenomic data and test their level of novelty. We used data from a three-year microbial metagenomic time series of the NW Mediterranean Sea, and conducted reference-free and database-guided analysis. The results revealed a significant genomic difference between the assembled and unassembled reads. The unassembled reads had a lower mean identity against public databases, and fewer metabolic pathways could be reconstructed. In addition, the unassembled fraction presented a clear temporal pattern, unlike the assembled ones, and a specific community composition that was similar to the rare communities defined by metabarcoding using the 16S rRNA gene. The rare gene pool was characterised by keystone bacterial taxa, and the presence of viruses, suggesting that viral lysis could maintain some taxa in a state of rarity. Our study demonstrates that unassembled metagenomic data can provide important information on the structure and functioning of microbial communities.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9723795 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43705-022-00167-8 | DOI Listing |
Mol Ecol Resour
July 2025
CNRS, Laboratoire d'ecologie Alpine (LECA), Université Grenoble Alpes, Saint-Martin-d'Heres, Rhône-Alpes, France.
Inferring community composition from shotgun sequencing of environmental DNA is highly dependent on the completeness of reference databases used to assign taxonomic information as well as the pipeline used. While the number of complete, fully assembled reference genomes is increasing rapidly, their taxonomic coverage is generally too sparse to use them to build complete reference databases that span all or most of the target taxa. Low-coverage, whole genome sequencing, or skimming, provides a cost-effective and scalable alternative source of genome-wide information in the interim.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol
June 2025
UK Health Security Agency, London, UK.
Here we introduce KPop, a novel versatile method based on full k-mer spectra and dataset-specific transformations, through which thousands of assembled or unassembled microbial genomes can be quickly compared. Unlike MinHash-based methods that produce distances and have lower resolution, KPop is able to accurately map sequences onto a low-dimensional space. Extensive validation on simulated and real-life viral and bacterial datasets shows that KPop can correctly separate sequences at both species and sub-species levels even when the overall genomic diversity is low.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
May 2025
CAS Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, 650201, Yunnan, P. R. China.
Salix brachista, commonly known as Cushion willow, is a common component of subnival alpine assemblages and a dioecious or monoecious plant with a creeping stem and numerous lateral branches. Cushion willow takes cuttings more easier and has a specific sex system, making it a suitable system for studying the evolution of plant sex determination, adaptive evolution of alpine plants, and mining stress resistance gene resource that cope with the hostile alpine environment. Therefore, Cushion willow has potential value in genetic improvements for willows used as bioenergy crops, in gardening, and as ornamental plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Methods
May 2025
Department of Bio and Nanotechnology, Nitte (Deemed to be University), Nitte University Centre for Science Education and Research, Karnataka, India.
Fundamental studies on nanoparticle superstructures or core-satellite assemblies and their interactions with biomolecules have led to advancements in nanobiotechnology. Consequently, some novel nucleic acid (NA) biosensing, diagnostics, and imaging approaches have been developed by functionalizing the surface of nanoparticles with target-specific analytes. For functionalization, multivalent nanoparticles are chosen over monovalent ones because they can enhance the concentration of probes on the nanoparticle surface and simultaneously bind to multiple target sites, leading to specific and sensitive detection, primarily in the case of target NAs with low-abundance target.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
July 2025
State Key Laboratory of Electrical Insulation and Power Equipment, Center of Nanomaterials for Renewable Energy, School of Electrical Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 710049, China. Electronic address:
The separation and transport of charge carriers between heterojunction interfaces are key factors that constrain their photocatalytic activity. In current study, a new binary heterojunction (BCN-N-SA) composed of g-CN nanosheet (BCN-N) and self-assembled supramolecular zinc porphyrin (SA-ZnTCPP) was successfully synthesized for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution (PHE) from water splitting. The optimal PHE rate of BCN-N-SA reaches 23.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF