skandiver: a divergence-based analysis tool for identifying intercellular mobile genetic elements
Xiaolei Brian Zhang, Grace Oualline, Jim Shaw, Yun William Yu

TL;DR
skandiver is a fast, divergence-based tool for detecting mobile genetic elements in bacterial genomes, capable of identifying novel MGEs without relying on gene annotations or existing databases.
Contribution
It introduces a divergence-based paradigm for MGE detection and provides a scalable, annotation-free method that can identify both known and novel mobile genetic elements from whole genome assemblies.
Findings
skandiver achieves high recall on integrated plasmids.
It is faster and more scalable than existing methods.
It can discover novel MGEs without database comparisons.
Abstract
Mobile genetic elements (MGEs) are as ubiquitous in nature as they are varied in type, ranging from viral insertions to transposons to incorporated plasmids. Horizontal transfer of MGEs across bacterial species may also pose a significant threat to global health due to their capability to harbour antibiotic resistance genes. However, despite cheap and rapid whole genome sequencing, the varied nature of MGEs makes it difficult to fully characterize them, and existing methods for detecting MGEs often don't agree on what should count. In this manuscript, we first define and argue in favor of a divergence-based characterization of mobile-genetic elements. Using that paradigm, we present skandiver, a tool designed to efficiently detect MGEs from whole genome assemblies without the need for gene annotation or markers. skandiver determines mobile elements via genome fragmentation, average…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGene expression and cancer classification
