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The Reliability of Metagenome-Assembled Genomes (MAGs) in Representing Natural Populations: Insights from Comparing MAGs against Isolate Genomes Derived from the Same Fecal Sample

Alexandra Meziti, Luis M. Rodriguez‐R, Janet K. Hatt, Ángela Peña, Karen Lévy, Konstantinos T. Konstantinidis

2021Applied and Environmental Microbiology214 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Metagenome assembly and the recovery of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) have recently become common tasks for microbiome studies across environmental and clinical settings. However, the extent to which MAGs can capture the genes of the population they represent remains speculative. Current approaches to evaluating MAG quality are limited to the recovery and copy number of universal housekeeping genes, which represent a small fraction of the total genome, leaving the majority of the genome essentially inaccessible. If MAG quality in reality is lower than these approaches would estimate, this could have dramatic consequences for all downstream analyses and interpretations. In this study, we evaluated this issue using an approach that employed comparisons of the gene contents of MAGs to the gene contents of isolate genomes derived from the same sample. Further, our samples originated from a diarrhea case-control study, and thus, our results are relevant for recovering the virulence factors of pathogens from metagenomic data sets.

Topics & Concepts

MetagenomicsGenomeBiologyMicrobiomePopulationComputational biologyFecesGeneticsGeneEvolutionary biologyEcologyEnvironmental healthMedicineGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesGut microbiota and healthMicrobial Community Ecology and Physiology
The Reliability of Metagenome-Assembled Genomes (MAGs) in Representing Natural Populations: Insights from Comparing MAGs against Isolate Genomes Derived from the Same Fecal Sample | Litcius