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TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution

Taxonomy assignment of freshwater microbial communities is limited by the minimally curated phylogenies used for large taxonomy databases. Here we introduce TaxAss, a taxonomy assignment workflow that classifies 16S rRNA gene amplicon data using two taxonomy reference databases: a large comprehensiv...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rohwer, Robin R., Hamilton, Joshua J., Newton, Ryan J., McMahon, Katherine D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6126143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30185512
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00327-18
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author Rohwer, Robin R.
Hamilton, Joshua J.
Newton, Ryan J.
McMahon, Katherine D.
author_facet Rohwer, Robin R.
Hamilton, Joshua J.
Newton, Ryan J.
McMahon, Katherine D.
author_sort Rohwer, Robin R.
collection PubMed
description Taxonomy assignment of freshwater microbial communities is limited by the minimally curated phylogenies used for large taxonomy databases. Here we introduce TaxAss, a taxonomy assignment workflow that classifies 16S rRNA gene amplicon data using two taxonomy reference databases: a large comprehensive database and a small ecosystem-specific database rigorously curated by scientists within a field. We applied TaxAss to five different freshwater data sets using the comprehensive SILVA database and the freshwater-specific FreshTrain database. TaxAss increased the percentage of the data set classified compared to using only SILVA, especially at fine-resolution family to species taxon levels, while across the freshwater test data sets classifications increased by as much as 11 to 40% of total reads. A similar increase in classifications was not observed in a control mouse gut data set, which was not expected to contain freshwater bacteria. TaxAss also maintained taxonomic richness compared to using only the FreshTrain across all taxon levels from phylum to species. Without TaxAss, most organisms not represented in the FreshTrain were unclassified, but at fine taxon levels, incorrect classifications became significant. We validated TaxAss using simulated amplicon data derived from full-length clone libraries and found that 96 to 99% of test sequences were correctly classified at fine resolution. TaxAss splits a data set’s sequences into two groups based on their percent identity to reference sequences in the ecosystem-specific database. Sequences with high similarity to sequences in the ecosystem-specific database are classified using that database, and the others are classified using the comprehensive database. TaxAss is free and open source and is available at https://www.github.com/McMahonLab/TaxAss. IMPORTANCE Microbial communities drive ecosystem processes, but microbial community composition analyses using 16S rRNA gene amplicon data sets are limited by the lack of fine-resolution taxonomy classifications. Coarse taxonomic groupings at the phylum, class, and order levels lump ecologically distinct organisms together. To avoid this, many researchers define operational taxonomic units (OTUs) based on clustered sequences, sequence variants, or unique sequences. These fine-resolution groupings are more ecologically relevant, but OTU definitions are data set dependent and cannot be compared between data sets. Microbial ecologists studying freshwater have curated a small, ecosystem-specific taxonomy database to provide consistent and up-to-date terminology. We created TaxAss, a workflow that leverages this database to assign taxonomy. We found that TaxAss improves fine-resolution taxonomic classifications (family, genus, and species). Fine taxonomic groupings are more ecologically relevant, so they provide an alternative to OTU-based analyses that is consistent and comparable between data sets.
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spelling pubmed-61261432018-09-07 TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution Rohwer, Robin R. Hamilton, Joshua J. Newton, Ryan J. McMahon, Katherine D. mSphere Research Article Taxonomy assignment of freshwater microbial communities is limited by the minimally curated phylogenies used for large taxonomy databases. Here we introduce TaxAss, a taxonomy assignment workflow that classifies 16S rRNA gene amplicon data using two taxonomy reference databases: a large comprehensive database and a small ecosystem-specific database rigorously curated by scientists within a field. We applied TaxAss to five different freshwater data sets using the comprehensive SILVA database and the freshwater-specific FreshTrain database. TaxAss increased the percentage of the data set classified compared to using only SILVA, especially at fine-resolution family to species taxon levels, while across the freshwater test data sets classifications increased by as much as 11 to 40% of total reads. A similar increase in classifications was not observed in a control mouse gut data set, which was not expected to contain freshwater bacteria. TaxAss also maintained taxonomic richness compared to using only the FreshTrain across all taxon levels from phylum to species. Without TaxAss, most organisms not represented in the FreshTrain were unclassified, but at fine taxon levels, incorrect classifications became significant. We validated TaxAss using simulated amplicon data derived from full-length clone libraries and found that 96 to 99% of test sequences were correctly classified at fine resolution. TaxAss splits a data set’s sequences into two groups based on their percent identity to reference sequences in the ecosystem-specific database. Sequences with high similarity to sequences in the ecosystem-specific database are classified using that database, and the others are classified using the comprehensive database. TaxAss is free and open source and is available at https://www.github.com/McMahonLab/TaxAss. IMPORTANCE Microbial communities drive ecosystem processes, but microbial community composition analyses using 16S rRNA gene amplicon data sets are limited by the lack of fine-resolution taxonomy classifications. Coarse taxonomic groupings at the phylum, class, and order levels lump ecologically distinct organisms together. To avoid this, many researchers define operational taxonomic units (OTUs) based on clustered sequences, sequence variants, or unique sequences. These fine-resolution groupings are more ecologically relevant, but OTU definitions are data set dependent and cannot be compared between data sets. Microbial ecologists studying freshwater have curated a small, ecosystem-specific taxonomy database to provide consistent and up-to-date terminology. We created TaxAss, a workflow that leverages this database to assign taxonomy. We found that TaxAss improves fine-resolution taxonomic classifications (family, genus, and species). Fine taxonomic groupings are more ecologically relevant, so they provide an alternative to OTU-based analyses that is consistent and comparable between data sets. American Society for Microbiology 2018-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6126143/ /pubmed/30185512 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00327-18 Text en Copyright © 2018 Rohwer et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Rohwer, Robin R.
Hamilton, Joshua J.
Newton, Ryan J.
McMahon, Katherine D.
TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution
title TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution
title_full TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution
title_fullStr TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution
title_full_unstemmed TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution
title_short TaxAss: Leveraging a Custom Freshwater Database Achieves Fine-Scale Taxonomic Resolution
title_sort taxass: leveraging a custom freshwater database achieves fine-scale taxonomic resolution
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6126143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30185512
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00327-18
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