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Freshwater Metaviromics and Bacteriophages: A Current Assessment of the State of the Art in Relation to Bioinformatic Challenges
Author(s) -
Katherine Bruder,
Kema Maiki,
Alexandria Cooper,
Emily Sible,
Jason W. Shapiro,
Siobhan C. Watkins,
Catherine Putonti
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
evolutionary bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.502
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 1176-9343
DOI - 10.4137/ebo.s38549
Subject(s) - metagenomics , human virome , identification (biology) , biology , computational biology , horizontal gene transfer , data science , diversity (politics) , bacteriophage , microbiology and biotechnology , evolutionary biology , ecology , genome , computer science , genetics , gene , political science , escherichia coli , law
Advances in bioinformatics and sequencing technologies have allowed for the analysis of complex microbial communities at an unprecedented rate. While much focus is often placed on the cellular members of these communities, viruses play a pivotal role, particularly bacteria-infecting viruses (bacteriophages); phages mediate global biogeochemical processes and drive microbial evolution through bacterial grazing and horizontal gene transfer. Despite their importance and ubiquity in nature, very little is known about the diversity and structure of viral communities. Though the need for culture-based methods for viral identification has been somewhat circumvented through metagenomic techniques, the analysis of metaviromic data is marred with many unique issues. In this review, we examine the current bioinformatic approaches for metavirome analyses and the inherent challenges facing the field as illustrated by the ongoing efforts in the exploration of freshwater phage populations.

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