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BUSCO Applications from Quality Assessments to Gene Prediction and Phylogenomics
Author(s) -
Robert M. Waterhouse,
Mathieu Seppey,
Felipe A. Simão,
Mosè Manni,
Panagiotis Ioannidis,
Guennadi Klioutchnikov,
Evgenia V. Kriventseva,
Evgeny M. Zdobnov
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/msx319
Subject(s) - phylogenomics , biology , genomics , genome , metagenomics , code refactoring , data quality , computational biology , software , gene , computer science , phylogenetics , genetics , metric (unit) , clade , economics , programming language , operations management
Genomics promises comprehensive surveying of genomes and metagenomes, but rapidly changing technologies and expanding data volumes make evaluation of completeness a challenging task. Technical sequencing quality metrics can be complemented by quantifying completeness of genomic data sets in terms of the expected gene content of Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologs (BUSCO, http://busco.ezlab.org). The latest software release implements a complete refactoring of the code to make it more flexible and extendable to facilitate high-throughput assessments. The original six lineage assessment data sets have been updated with improved species sampling, 34 new subsets have been built for vertebrates, arthropods, fungi, and prokaryotes that greatly enhance resolution, and data sets are now also available for nematodes, protists, and plants. Here, we present BUSCO v3 with example analyses that highlight the wide-ranging utility of BUSCO assessments, which extend beyond quality control of genomics data sets to applications in comparative genomics analyses, gene predictor training, metagenomics, and phylogenomics.

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