Unifying the known and unknown microbial coding sequence space
Article 2022 en
Authors
CV
Chiara Vanni
MS
Matthew S. Schechter
SA
Silvia G. Acinas
Abstract
1 min read
Genes of unknown function are among the biggest challenges in molecular biology, especially in microbial systems, where 40-60% of the predicted genes are unknown. Despite previous attempts, systematic approaches to include the unknown fraction into analytical workflows are still lacking. Here, we present a conceptual framework, its translation into the computational workflow AGNOSTOS and a demonstration on how we can bridge the known-unknown gap in genomes and metagenomes. By analyzing 415,971,742 genes predicted from 1749 metagenomes and 28,941 bacterial and archaeal genomes, we quantify the extent of the unknown fraction, its diversity, and its relevance across multiple organisms and environments. The unknown sequence space is exceptionally diverse, phylogenetically more conserved than the known fraction and predominantly taxonomically restricted at the species level. From the 71 M genes identified to be of unknown function, we compiled a collection of 283,874 lineage-specific genes of unknown function for
ROBERT FINN, Renzo Kottmann, Alex Mitchell, Pablo Sánchez, Kimmo Sirén, Martin Steinegger, Frank Oliver Glöckner, Antonio Fernàndez-Guerra, Chiara Vanni, Matthew S. Schechter, Silvia G. Acinas, Albert Barberán, Pier Luigi Buttigieg, Emilio O. Casamayor, Tom O. Delmont, Carlos M. Duarte, A. Murat Eren
Chiara Vanni, Matthew S. Schechter, Silvia G. Acinas, Albert Barberán, Pier Luigi Buttigieg, Emilio O. Casamayor, Tom O. Delmont, Carlos M. Duarte, A. Murat Eren, ROBERT FINN, Renzo Kottmann, Alex Mitchell, Pablo Sánchez, Kimmo Sirén, Martin Steinegger, Frank Oliver Gloeckner, Antonio Fernàndez-Guerra
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