Frontiers in Microbiology (Apr 2021)

Evaluation of the Microba Community Profiler for Taxonomic Profiling of Metagenomic Datasets From the Human Gut Microbiome

  • Donovan H. Parks,
  • Fabio Rigato,
  • Patricia Vera-Wolf,
  • Lutz Krause,
  • Philip Hugenholtz,
  • Gene W. Tyson,
  • Gene W. Tyson,
  • David L. A. Wood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.643682
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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A fundamental goal of microbial ecology is to accurately determine the species composition in a given microbial ecosystem. In the context of the human microbiome, this is important for establishing links between microbial species and disease states. Here we benchmark the Microba Community Profiler (MCP) against other metagenomic classifiers using 140 moderate to complex in silico microbial communities and a standardized reference genome database. MCP generated accurate relative abundance estimates and made substantially fewer false positive predictions than other classifiers while retaining a high recall rate. We further demonstrated that the accuracy of species classification was substantially increased using the Microba Genome Database, which is more comprehensive than reference datasets used by other classifiers and illustrates the importance of including genomes of uncultured taxa in reference databases. Consequently, MCP classifies appreciably more reads than other classifiers when using their recommended reference databases. These results establish MCP as best-in-class with the ability to produce comprehensive and accurate species profiles of human gastrointestinal samples.

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