home Scholarly Literature (Journals, Books, Reports) New open source software: FHiTING – tool for fungal ID from next-gen sequence data

New open source software: FHiTING – tool for fungal ID from next-gen sequence data

Quick post.  There is a paper out from Jordan Peccia’s lab (authors Karen Dannemiller, Darryl Reeves, Kyle Bibby, Naomichi Yamamoto and Jordan Peccia) of potential interest: Fungal High-throughput Taxonomic Identification tool for use with Next-Generation Sequencing (FHiTINGS) – 

The paper alas is not open access so I do not have access to it as I write this.  But fortunately the software it describes is opensource and is available at http://sourceforge.net/projects/fhitings/.  The abstract is

Improvements in DNA sequencing technology provide unprecedented opportunities to explore fungal diversity, but also present challenges in data analysis due to the large number of sequences generated. Here, we describe an open source software program “FHiTINGS” that utilizes the output of a BLASTn (blastall) search to rapidly identify, classify, and parse internal transcribed spacer (ITS) DNA sequences produced in fungal ecology studies that utilize next-generation DNA sequencing. This tool was designed for use with 454 pyrosequencing and is also appropriate for use with any sequencing platform that allows for BLAST searches against the indicated ITS database. For each sequence, FHiTINGS uses the lowest common ancestor method (LCA) to produce a single identification from BLAST output results, and then assigns taxonomic ranks from species through kingdom when possible for each sequence based on the Index Fungorum database. The program then sums and sorts this data into tabular form to enable rapid analysis of the sample, including α-diversity measures or richness. In silico testing demonstrates the time required to analyze and classify 1000 sequences is reduced from over 2 h by manual sorting to <1 min of computational time when using FHiTINGS, and that the classification output from the software is consistent with that derived from manual sorting of the data.

I haven’t used the software (I don’t do any fungal ITS analysis — yet).  But as we are moving into doing more fungal analyses I very well might try it out soon.

FHiTING

 

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