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PHROG: families of prokaryotic virus proteins clustered using remote homology.


ABSTRACT: Viruses are abundant, diverse and ancestral biological entities. Their diversity is high, both in terms of the number of different protein families encountered and in the sequence heterogeneity of each protein family. The recent increase in sequenced viral genomes constitutes a great opportunity to gain new insights into this diversity and consequently urges the development of annotation resources to help functional and comparative analysis. Here, we introduce PHROG (Prokaryotic Virus Remote Homologous Groups), a library of viral protein families generated using a new clustering approach based on remote homology detection by HMM profile-profile comparisons. Considering 17 473 reference (pro)viruses of prokaryotes, 868 340 of the total 938 864 proteins were grouped into 38 880 clusters that proved to be a 2-fold deeper clustering than using a classical strategy based on BLAST-like similarity searches, and yet to remain homogeneous. Manual inspection of similarities to various reference sequence databases led to the annotation of 5108 clusters (containing 50.6 % of the total protein dataset) with 705 different annotation terms, included in 9 functional categories, specifically designed for viruses. Hopefully, PHROG will be a useful tool to better annotate future prokaryotic viral sequences thus helping the scientific community to better understand the evolution and ecology of these entities.

SUBMITTER: Terzian P 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8341000 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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PHROG: families of prokaryotic virus proteins clustered using remote homology.

Terzian Paul P   Olo Ndela Eric E   Galiez Clovis C   Lossouarn Julien J   Pérez Bucio Rubén Enrique RE   Mom Robin R   Toussaint Ariane A   Petit Marie-Agnès MA   Enault François F  

NAR genomics and bioinformatics 20210805 3


Viruses are abundant, diverse and ancestral biological entities. Their diversity is high, both in terms of the number of different protein families encountered and in the sequence heterogeneity of each protein family. The recent increase in sequenced viral genomes constitutes a great opportunity to gain new insights into this diversity and consequently urges the development of annotation resources to help functional and comparative analysis. Here, we introduce PHROG (Prokaryotic Virus Remote Hom  ...[more]

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