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Genome Annotation Generator: a simple tool for generating and correcting WGS annotation tables for NCBI submission
Author(s) -
Scott M. Geib,
Brian E. Hall,
Theodore DeRego,
Forest T. Bremer,
Kyle Cannoles,
Sheina B. Sim
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
gigascience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.947
H-Index - 54
ISSN - 2047-217X
DOI - 10.1093/gigascience/giy018
Subject(s) - annotation , perl , genome project , computer science , genome , genome browser , software , reference genome , python (programming language) , data curation , genomics , gene annotation , database , computational biology , world wide web , biology , genetics , programming language , gene , artificial intelligence
One of the most overlooked, yet critical, components of a whole genome sequencing (WGS) project is the submission and curation of the data to a genomic repository, most commonly the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). While large genome centers or genome groups have developed software tools for post-annotation assembly filtering, annotation, and conversion into the NCBI's annotation table format, these tools typically require back-end setup and connection to an Structured Query Language (SQL) database and/or some knowledge of programming (Perl, Python) to implement. With WGS becoming commonplace, genome sequencing projects are moving away from the genome centers and into the ecology or biology lab, where fewer resources are present to support the process of genome assembly curation. To fill this gap, we developed software to assess, filter, and transfer annotation and convert a draft genome assembly and annotation set into the NCBI annotation table (.tbl) format, facilitating submission to the NCBI Genome Assembly database. This software has no dependencies, is compatible across platforms, and utilizes a simple command to perform a variety of simple and complex post-analysis, pre-NCBI submission WGS project tasks.

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