Microbiomes from every environment contain a myriad of uncultivated archaeal and bacterial viruses, but studying these viruses is hampered by the lack of a universal, scalable taxonomic framework. We present vConTACT v.2.0, a network-based application utilizing whole genome gene-sharing profiles for virus taxonomy that integrates distance-based hierarchical clustering and confidence scores for all taxonomic predictions. We report near-identical (96%) replication of existing genus-level viral taxonomy assignments from the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses for National Center for Biotechnology Information virus RefSeq. Application of vConTACT v.2.0 to 1,364 previously unclassified viruses deposited in virus RefSeq as reference ge...
Historically, virus taxonomy has been limited to describing viruses that were readily cultivated in ...
Viruses influence human health as conventional pathogens, as modulators of gene expression and throu...
High-throughput sequencing (HTS) and its use in recovering and assembling novel virus sequences from...
International audienceMicrobiomes from every environment contain a myriad of uncultivated archaeal a...
Microbiomes from every environment contain a myriad of uncultivated archaeal and bacterial viruses, ...
Taxonomic classification of archaeal and bacterial viruses is challenging, yet also fundamental for ...
Genome Relationship Applied to Virus Taxonomy (GRAViTy) is a genetics-based tool that computes seque...
Genome Relationship Applied to Virus Taxonomy (GRAViTy) is a genetics-based tool that computes seque...
Viruses are the most ubiquitous and diverse entities in the biome. Due to the rapid growth of newly ...
The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) classifies viruses into families, genera a...
Two key steps in the analysis of uncultured viruses recovered from metagenomes are the taxonomic cla...
The genome sequence is the only characteristic readily obtainable for all known viruses, underlying ...
The genome sequence is the only characteristic readily obtainable for all known viruses, underlying ...
Viruses are the most abundant biological entities on Earth, but challenges in detecting, isolating, ...
Historically, virus taxonomy has been limited to describing viruses that were readily cultivated in ...
Historically, virus taxonomy has been limited to describing viruses that were readily cultivated in ...
Viruses influence human health as conventional pathogens, as modulators of gene expression and throu...
High-throughput sequencing (HTS) and its use in recovering and assembling novel virus sequences from...
International audienceMicrobiomes from every environment contain a myriad of uncultivated archaeal a...
Microbiomes from every environment contain a myriad of uncultivated archaeal and bacterial viruses, ...
Taxonomic classification of archaeal and bacterial viruses is challenging, yet also fundamental for ...
Genome Relationship Applied to Virus Taxonomy (GRAViTy) is a genetics-based tool that computes seque...
Genome Relationship Applied to Virus Taxonomy (GRAViTy) is a genetics-based tool that computes seque...
Viruses are the most ubiquitous and diverse entities in the biome. Due to the rapid growth of newly ...
The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) classifies viruses into families, genera a...
Two key steps in the analysis of uncultured viruses recovered from metagenomes are the taxonomic cla...
The genome sequence is the only characteristic readily obtainable for all known viruses, underlying ...
The genome sequence is the only characteristic readily obtainable for all known viruses, underlying ...
Viruses are the most abundant biological entities on Earth, but challenges in detecting, isolating, ...
Historically, virus taxonomy has been limited to describing viruses that were readily cultivated in ...
Historically, virus taxonomy has been limited to describing viruses that were readily cultivated in ...
Viruses influence human health as conventional pathogens, as modulators of gene expression and throu...
High-throughput sequencing (HTS) and its use in recovering and assembling novel virus sequences from...