Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.

Correctly identifying nearest "neighbors" of a given microorganism is important in industrial and clinical applications where close relationships imply similar treatment. Microbial classification based on similarity of physiological and genetic organism traits (polyphasic similarity) is ex...

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Main Authors: Chengsheng Zhu, Tom O Delmont, Timothy M Vogel, Yana Bromberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-08-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004472
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spelling doaj-4cff5b3127ea4ac4a186108bb6f969232021-06-17T04:33:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582015-08-01118e100447210.1371/journal.pcbi.1004472Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.Chengsheng ZhuTom O DelmontTimothy M VogelYana BrombergCorrectly identifying nearest "neighbors" of a given microorganism is important in industrial and clinical applications where close relationships imply similar treatment. Microbial classification based on similarity of physiological and genetic organism traits (polyphasic similarity) is experimentally difficult and, arguably, subjective. Evolutionary relatedness, inferred from phylogenetic markers, facilitates classification but does not guarantee functional identity between members of the same taxon or lack of similarity between different taxa. Using over thirteen hundred sequenced bacterial genomes, we built a novel function-based microorganism classification scheme, functional-repertoire similarity-based organism network (FuSiON; flattened to fusion). Our scheme is phenetic, based on a network of quantitatively defined organism relationships across the known prokaryotic space. It correlates significantly with the current taxonomy, but the observed discrepancies reveal both (1) the inconsistency of functional diversity levels among different taxa and (2) an (unsurprising) bias towards prioritizing, for classification purposes, relatively minor traits of particular interest to humans. Our dynamic network-based organism classification is independent of the arbitrary pairwise organism similarity cut-offs traditionally applied to establish taxonomic identity. Instead, it reveals natural, functionally defined organism groupings and is thus robust in handling organism diversity. Additionally, fusion can use organism meta-data to highlight the specific environmental factors that drive microbial diversification. Our approach provides a complementary view to cladistic assignments and holds important clues for further exploration of microbial lifestyles. Fusion is a more practical fit for biomedical, industrial, and ecological applications, as many of these rely on understanding the functional capabilities of the microbes in their environment and are less concerned with phylogenetic descent.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004472
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chengsheng Zhu
Tom O Delmont
Timothy M Vogel
Yana Bromberg
spellingShingle Chengsheng Zhu
Tom O Delmont
Timothy M Vogel
Yana Bromberg
Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Chengsheng Zhu
Tom O Delmont
Timothy M Vogel
Yana Bromberg
author_sort Chengsheng Zhu
title Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.
title_short Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.
title_full Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.
title_fullStr Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.
title_full_unstemmed Functional Basis of Microorganism Classification.
title_sort functional basis of microorganism classification.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Correctly identifying nearest "neighbors" of a given microorganism is important in industrial and clinical applications where close relationships imply similar treatment. Microbial classification based on similarity of physiological and genetic organism traits (polyphasic similarity) is experimentally difficult and, arguably, subjective. Evolutionary relatedness, inferred from phylogenetic markers, facilitates classification but does not guarantee functional identity between members of the same taxon or lack of similarity between different taxa. Using over thirteen hundred sequenced bacterial genomes, we built a novel function-based microorganism classification scheme, functional-repertoire similarity-based organism network (FuSiON; flattened to fusion). Our scheme is phenetic, based on a network of quantitatively defined organism relationships across the known prokaryotic space. It correlates significantly with the current taxonomy, but the observed discrepancies reveal both (1) the inconsistency of functional diversity levels among different taxa and (2) an (unsurprising) bias towards prioritizing, for classification purposes, relatively minor traits of particular interest to humans. Our dynamic network-based organism classification is independent of the arbitrary pairwise organism similarity cut-offs traditionally applied to establish taxonomic identity. Instead, it reveals natural, functionally defined organism groupings and is thus robust in handling organism diversity. Additionally, fusion can use organism meta-data to highlight the specific environmental factors that drive microbial diversification. Our approach provides a complementary view to cladistic assignments and holds important clues for further exploration of microbial lifestyles. Fusion is a more practical fit for biomedical, industrial, and ecological applications, as many of these rely on understanding the functional capabilities of the microbes in their environment and are less concerned with phylogenetic descent.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004472
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