Abstract

Background

Simulated metagenomic reads are widely used to benchmark software and workflows for metagenome interpretation. The results of metagenomic benchmarks depend on the assumptions about their underlying ecosystems. Conclusions from benchmark studies are therefore limited to the ecosystems they mimic. Ideally, simulations are therefore based on genomes, which resemble particular metagenomic communities realistically.

Results

We developed Tamock to facilitate the realistic simulation of metagenomic reads according to a metagenomic community, based on real sequence data. Benchmarks samples can be created from all genomes and taxonomic domains present in NCBI RefSeq. Tamock automatically determines taxonomic profiles from shotgun sequence data, selects reference genomes accordingly and uses them to simulate metagenomic reads. We present an example use case for Tamock by assessing assembly and binning method performance for selected microbiomes.

Conclusions

Tamock facilitates automated simulation of habitat-specific benchmark metagenomic data based on real sequence data and is implemented as a user-friendly command-line application, providing extensive additional information along with the simulated benchmark data. Resulting benchmarks enable an assessment of computational methods, workflows, and parameters specifically for a metagenomic habitat or ecosystem of a metagenomic study.

Availability

Source code, documentation and install instructions are freely available at GitHub (https://github.com/gerners/tamock).

Details

Title
Tamock: simulation of habitat-specific benchmark data in metagenomics
Author
Gerner, Samuel M; Graf, Alexandra B; Rattei, Thomas  VIAFID ORCID Logo 
Pages
1-13
Section
Software
Publication year
2021
Publication date
2021
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712105
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2528903056
Copyright
© 2021. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.