Microorganisms widely exist in nature and are closely related to human life and production. They are generally divided into fungi, actinomycetes, bacteria, spirulina, rickettsia, chlamydia, mycoplasma and viruses. Microbial whole genome sequencing is an important tool for mapping genomes of novel organisms, finishing genomes of known organisms, or comparing genomes across multiple samples. Sequencing the entire microbial genome is important for construction of accurate reference genomes, microbial identification, and other comparative genomic studies. Comparative genomic analysis based on whole genome sequencing plays an irreplaceable role in studying pathogenic mechanisms of pathogenic microorganism, evolution of pathogenic genes and screening of novel, efficient drug targets. Microbial whole genome sequencing can be widely used in various fields.
Diseases
Pathogenic microorganism includes all kinds of microorganisms that cause human diseases, food corruption, animal infection in animal husbandry and breeding industry, and plant diseases. Researches focus on disease-related genes, regulatory and interaction systems, metabolic systems, genetic variation, laboratory diagnosis and specific prevention, drug resistance genes, virulence genes and so on. Specifically, microbial whole genome sequencing can be applied to:
Diagnosis and identification of pathogens
Epidemiological investigation and tracing
Rapid identification of pathogen character
Analysis and prediction of disease prevalence
Vaccine variation monitoring and efficacy evaluation
Surveillance of foodborne pathogens
Drug targets discovery
Foods
Whole genome sequencing of microorganisms in food and bioinformatics analysis of data can help people predict genes that play an important role in the fermentation process or product quality, providing information about the metabolic pathways of microorganisms and their interaction with the environment. Microbial whole genome sequencing opens up the possibility of modifying microorganisms to make them more efficient in the production of vinegar, liquor, yogurt, and many other fermentation processes.
Agriculture
Microorganism in agriculture involves planting and breeding, processing of agricultural products, agricultural biotechnology, agricultural ecology and other research and application. Microbial whole genome sequencing can make people have a better understanding of agriculture microbe from genomic level, and the subsequent studies on genome structure and function lay an important foundation for agromicrobiology in the field below:
Establish agricultural microbial gene bank
Soil microorganism (including root microorganism)
Plant nutrition
Biological nitrogen fixation
Microbial pesticide
Microbial fertilizer
Feed additive
Biogas fermentation
Environment & Industry
The microorganism is one of the important factors to maintain the energy and material circulation in the ecosystem, it plays an important role in the degradation of various pollutants and harmful substances, and has great application value in energy production and renewable utilization. Some environmental microorganisms can adapt to special environments, such as high temperature, low temperature, high pressure, acid, alkali, heavy metal, and high substrate concentration.
Microbial whole genome sequencing allows people to know about the secrets of these microorganisms' adaptation to extreme environments, and provides a lot of assistance in pollution control, environmental protection, oil exploitation, preservation and transportation of food and medicine, biofuel, fermentation industry and many other fields in environment and industry.
At CD Genomics, our expert team with extensive experience can help you fully understand microbial communities and take advantage of them. For this purpose, we provide the following services:
16S/18S/ITS Amplicon Sequencing
References:
Abriouel, H., Lerma, L.L., Muñoz, M.D.C.C., Montoro, B.P., Kabisch, J., Pichner, R., Cho, G.S., Neve, H., Fusco, V., Franz, C.M., Gálvez, A. & Benomar, N. (2015) ‘The controversial nature of the Weissella genus: technological and functional aspects versus whole genome analysis-based pathogenic potential for their application in food and health’, Front. Microbiol., 6: 1997.
Aarestrup FM, Brown EW, Detter C, Gerner-Smidt P, Gilmour MW, Harmsen D, Hendriksen RS, Hewson R, Heymann DL, Johansson K, Ijaz K, Keim PS, Koopmans M, Kroneman A, Lo Fo Wong D, Lund O, Palm D, Sawanpanyalert P, Sobel J, Schlundt J (2012) ‘Integrating genome-based informatics to modernize global disease monitoring, information sharing, and response’, Emerg Infect Dis, 18: e1.
Agren R, Liu L, Shoaie S, VongsangnakW, Nookaew I, Nielsen J (2013) ‘The RAVEN toolbox and its use for generating a genome-scale metabolic model for Penicillium chrysogenum’, PLoS Comput Biol, 9:e1002980.
Bennett GM, Moran NA (2013) ‘Small, smaller, smallest: the origins and evolution of ancient dual symbioses in a Phloem-feeding insect’, Genome Biol Evol, 5:1675–1688.
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