U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

Links from BioSample

SRX25256184: Unraveling the Impact of Genome Assembly on Bacterial Typing: A One Health Perspective
1 ILLUMINA (NextSeq 1000) run: 504,127 spots, 240.9M bases, 147.7Mb downloads

Design: missing
Submitted by: ANSES
Study: Unraveling the Impact of Genome Assembly on Bacterial Typing: A One Health Perspective
show Abstracthide Abstract
In the context of global bacterial pathogen surveillance, it is crucial to ensure interoperability and harmonized data. Several systems are currently implemented for such surveillance, being designed to compare bacteria and identify outbreak clusters based on core genome MultiLocus Sequence Typing (cgMLST) profiles. Among the different approaches available to generate bacterial cgMLST profiles, our research used an assembly-based approach - as implemented in the chewBBACA tool - according to European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) guidelines. Simulations of short-read sequencing were conducted for 27 bacterial pathogen species of interest in animal, plant, and human health to evaluate the repeatability and reproducibility of cgMLST profiles. Various quality parameters, such as read quality and depth of sequencing were applied, and several read simulations and genome assemblies were repeated using three commonly used tools: SPAdes, Unicycler and Shovill. The results highlighted bioinformatic variability in cgMLST profiles, which appears unrelated to the assembly tools, but rather induced by the intrinsic composition of the genomes themselves. This variability observed in simulated sequencing was further validated with real data for five of the bacterial pathogens studied.
Sample:
SAMN42178769 • SRS21941515 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Name: LSV5252_rep1
Instrument: NextSeq 1000
Strategy: WGS
Source: GENOMIC
Selection: unspecified
Layout: PAIRED
Runs: 1 run, 504,127 spots, 240.9M bases, 147.7Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR29755368504,127240.9M147.7Mb2024-07-09

ID:
33597930

Supplemental Content

Recent activity