TY - JOUR
T1 - A comprehensive and high-quality collection of escherichia coli genomes and their genes
AU - Horesh, Gal
AU - Blackwell, Grace A.
AU - Tonkin-Hill, Gerry
AU - Corander, Jukka
AU - Heinz, Eva
AU - Thomson, Nicholas R.
PY - 2021/1/8
Y1 - 2021/1/8
N2 - Escherichia coli is a highly diverse organism that includes a range of commensal and pathogenic variants found across a range of niches and worldwide. In addition to causing severe intestinal and extraintestinal disease, E. coli is considered a priority pathogen due to high levels of observed drug resistance. The diversity in the E. coli population is driven by high genome plasticity and a very large gene pool. All these have made E. coli one of the most well-studied organisms, as well as a commonly used laboratory strain. Today, there are thousands of sequenced E. coli genomes stored in public databases. While data is widely available, accessing the information in order to perform analyses can still be a challenge. Collecting relevant available data requires accessing different sources, where data may be stored in a range of formats, and often requires further manipulation and processing to apply various analyses and extract useful information. In this study, we collated and intensely curated a collection of over 10000 E. coli and Shigella genomes to provide a single, uniform, high-quality dataset. Shigella were included as they are considered specialized pathovars of E. coli. We provide these data in a number of easily accessible formats that can be used as the foundation for future studies addressing the biological differences between E. coli lineages and the distribution and flow of genes in the E. coli population at a high resolution. The analysis we present emphasizes our lack of understanding of the true diversity of the E. coli species, and the biased nature of our current understanding of the genetic diversity of such a key pathogen.
AB - Escherichia coli is a highly diverse organism that includes a range of commensal and pathogenic variants found across a range of niches and worldwide. In addition to causing severe intestinal and extraintestinal disease, E. coli is considered a priority pathogen due to high levels of observed drug resistance. The diversity in the E. coli population is driven by high genome plasticity and a very large gene pool. All these have made E. coli one of the most well-studied organisms, as well as a commonly used laboratory strain. Today, there are thousands of sequenced E. coli genomes stored in public databases. While data is widely available, accessing the information in order to perform analyses can still be a challenge. Collecting relevant available data requires accessing different sources, where data may be stored in a range of formats, and often requires further manipulation and processing to apply various analyses and extract useful information. In this study, we collated and intensely curated a collection of over 10000 E. coli and Shigella genomes to provide a single, uniform, high-quality dataset. Shigella were included as they are considered specialized pathovars of E. coli. We provide these data in a number of easily accessible formats that can be used as the foundation for future studies addressing the biological differences between E. coli lineages and the distribution and flow of genes in the E. coli population at a high resolution. The analysis we present emphasizes our lack of understanding of the true diversity of the E. coli species, and the biased nature of our current understanding of the genetic diversity of such a key pathogen.
KW - Antimicrobial resistance
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - Horizontal gene transfer
KW - Pan-genome
KW - Shigella
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85102156512&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://github.com/ghoresh11/ecoli_genome_collection
U2 - 10.1099/mgen.0.000499
DO - 10.1099/mgen.0.000499
M3 - Article
C2 - 33417534
AN - SCOPUS:85102156512
SN - 2057-5858
VL - 7
JO - Microbial Genomics
JF - Microbial Genomics
IS - 2
M1 - 000499
ER -