Presented by: Samuel Zimmerman
View Abstract
Measuring microbial diversity is traditionally based on microbe taxonomy. Here, in contrast, we aimed to quantify heterogeneity in microbial gene content across 14,183 metagenomic samples spanning 17 ecologies including — 6 human-associated, 7 non-human-host-associated, and 4 in other non-human host environments. In total, we identified 117,629,181 non-redundant genes. The vast majority of genes (66%) occurred in only one sample (i.e. “singletons”). By contrast, we found 1,864 sequences present in every metagenome, but not necessarily every bacterial genome. Additionally, we report datasets of other ecology-associated genes (e.g. abundant in only gut ecosystems) and simultaneously demonstrated that prior microbiome gene catalogs are both incomplete and inaccurately cluster microbial genetic life (e.g. at gene-sequence identifies that are too restrictive). We provide our results and the sets of environmentally-differentiating genes described above at http://www.microbial-genes.bio
Samuel Zimmerman- Poster Description (Audio Clip)