PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

A phylogeny-based benchmarking test for orthology inference reveals the limitations of function-based validation.

  • Kalliopi Trachana,
  • Kristoffer Forslund,
  • Tomas Larsson,
  • Sean Powell,
  • Tobias Doerks,
  • Christian von Mering,
  • Peer Bork

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111122
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e111122

Abstract

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Accurate orthology prediction is crucial for many applications in the post-genomic era. The lack of broadly accepted benchmark tests precludes a comprehensive analysis of orthology inference. So far, functional annotation between orthologs serves as a performance proxy. However, this violates the fundamental principle of orthology as an evolutionary definition, while it is often not applicable due to limited experimental evidence for most species. Therefore, we constructed high quality "gold standard" orthologous groups that can serve as a benchmark set for orthology inference in bacterial species. Herein, we used this dataset to demonstrate 1) why a manually curated, phylogeny-based dataset is more appropriate for benchmarking orthology than other popular practices and 2) how it guides database design and parameterization through careful error quantification. More specifically, we illustrate how function-based tests often fail to identify false assignments, misjudging the true performance of orthology inference methods. We also examined how our dataset can instruct the selection of a "core" species repertoire to improve detection accuracy. We conclude that including more genomes at the proper evolutionary distances can influence the overall quality of orthology detection. The curated gene families, called Reference Orthologous Groups, are publicly available at http://eggnog.embl.de/orthobench2.