The reconstruction of genomes is a critical step in genome-resolved metagenomics and for multi-omic data integration from microbial communities. Here, we present binny, a binning tool that produces high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAG) from both contiguous and highly fragmented genomes. Based on established metrics, binny outperforms or is highly competitive with commonly used and state-of-the-art binning methods and finds unique genomes that could not be detected by other methods. binny uses kmer-composition and coverage by metagenomic reads for iterative, nonlinear dimension reduction of genomic signatures as well as subsequent automated contig clustering with cluster assessment using lineage-specific marker gene sets. When compared with seven widely used binning algorithms, binny provides substantial amounts of uniquely identified MAGs and almost always recovers the most near-complete (> 95% pure, > 90% complete) and high-quality (> 90% pure, > 70% complete) genomes from simulated datasets from the Critical Assessment of Metagenome Interpretation initiative, as well as substantially more high-quality draft genomes, as defined by the Minimum Information about a Metagenome-Assembled Genome standard, from a real-world benchmark comprised of metagenomes from various environments than any other tested method.
CITATION STYLE
Hickl, O., Queirós, P., Wilmes, P., May, P., & Heintz-Buschart, A. (2022). binny: an automated binning algorithm to recover high-quality genomes from complex metagenomic datasets. Briefings in Bioinformatics, 23(6). https://doi.org/10.1093/bib/bbac431
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.