Recovering full-length viral genomes from metagenomes

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Abstract

Infectious disease metagenomics is driven by the question: "what is causing the disease?" in contrast to classical metagenome studies which are guided by "what is out there?" In case of a novel virus, a first step to eventually establishing etiology can be to recover a full-length viral genome from a metagenomic sample. However, retrieval of a full-length genome of a divergent virus is technically challenging and can be time-consuming and costly. Here we discuss different assembly and fragment linkage strategies such as iterative assembly, motif searches, k-mer frequency profiling, coverage profile binning, and other strategies used to recover genomes of potential viral pathogens in a timely and cost-effective manner.

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Smits, S. L., Bodewes, R., Ruiz-González, A., Baumgärtner, W., Koopmans, M. P., Osterhaus, A. D. M. E., & Schürch, A. C. (2015). Recovering full-length viral genomes from metagenomes. Frontiers in Microbiology. Frontiers Media S.A. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2015.01069

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