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Dive into the research topics where Konstantinos Mavromatis is active.

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Featured researches published by Konstantinos Mavromatis.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

IMG: the integrated microbial genomes database and comparative analysis system

Victor Markowitz; I-Min A. Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Ken Chu; Ernest Szeto; Yuri Grechkin; Anna Ratner; Biju Jacob; Jinghua Huang; Peter Williams; Marcel Huntemann; Iain Anderson; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; Nikos C. Kyrpides

The Integrated Microbial Genomes (IMG) system serves as a community resource for comparative analysis of publicly available genomes in a comprehensive integrated context. IMG integrates publicly available draft and complete genomes from all three domains of life with a large number of plasmids and viruses. IMG provides tools and viewers for analyzing and reviewing the annotations of genes and genomes in a comparative context. IMGs data content and analytical capabilities have been continuously extended through regular updates since its first release in March 2005. IMG is available at http://img.jgi.doe.gov. Companion IMG systems provide support for expert review of genome annotations (IMG/ER: http://img.jgi.doe.gov/er), teaching courses and training in microbial genome analysis (IMG/EDU: http://img.jgi.doe.gov/edu) and analysis of genomes related to the Human Microbiome Project (IMG/HMP: http://www.hmpdacc-resources.org/img_hmp).


Nature | 2009

A phylogeny-driven genomic encyclopaedia of Bacteria and Archaea.

Dongying Wu; Philip Hugenholtz; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Rüdiger Pukall; Eileen Dalin; Natalia Ivanova; Victor Kunin; Lynne Goodwin; Martin Wu; Brian J. Tindall; Sean D. Hooper; Amrita Pati; Athanasios Lykidis; Stefan Spring; Iain Anderson; Patrik D’haeseleer; Adam Zemla; Alla Lapidus; Matt Nolan; Alex Copeland; Cliff Han; Feng Chen; Jan-Fang Cheng; Susan Lucas; Cheryl A. Kerfeld; Elke Lang; Sabine Gronow; Patrick Chain; David Bruce; Edward M. Rubin

Sequencing of bacterial and archaeal genomes has revolutionized our understanding of the many roles played by microorganisms. There are now nearly 1,000 completed bacterial and archaeal genomes available, most of which were chosen for sequencing on the basis of their physiology. As a result, the perspective provided by the currently available genomes is limited by a highly biased phylogenetic distribution. To explore the value added by choosing microbial genomes for sequencing on the basis of their evolutionary relationships, we have sequenced and analysed the genomes of 56 culturable species of Bacteria and Archaea selected to maximize phylogenetic coverage. Analysis of these genomes demonstrated pronounced benefits (compared to an equivalent set of genomes randomly selected from the existing database) in diverse areas including the reconstruction of phylogenetic history, the discovery of new protein families and biological properties, and the prediction of functions for known genes from other organisms. Our results strongly support the need for systematic ‘phylogenomic’ efforts to compile a phylogeny-driven ‘Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea’ in order to derive maximum knowledge from existing microbial genome data as well as from genome sequences to come.


Bioinformatics | 2009

IMG ER

Victor Markowitz; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; I-Min A. Chen; Ken Chu; Nikos C. Kyrpides

MOTIVATION A rapidly increasing number of microbial genomes are sequenced by organizations worldwide and are eventually included into various public genome data resources. The quality of the annotations depends largely on the original dataset providers, with erroneous or incomplete annotations often carried over into the public resources and difficult to correct. RESULTS We have developed an Expert Review (ER) version of the Integrated Microbial Genomes (IMG) system, with the goal of supporting systematic and efficient revision of microbial genome annotations. IMG ER provides tools for the review and curation of annotations of both new and publicly available microbial genomes within IMGs rich integrated genome framework. New genome datasets are included into IMG ER prior to their public release either with their native annotations or with annotations generated by IMG ERs annotation pipeline. IMG ER tools allow addressing annotation problems detected with IMGs comparative analysis tools, such as genes missed by gene prediction pipelines or genes without an associated function. Over the past year, IMG ER was used for improving the annotations of about 150 microbial genomes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

IMG 4 version of the integrated microbial genomes comparative analysis system

Victor Markowitz; I-Min A. Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Ken Chu; Ernest Szeto; Manoj Pillay; Anna Ratner; Jinghua Huang; Tanja Woyke; Marcel Huntemann; Iain Anderson; Konstantinos Billis; Neha Varghese; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Amrita Pati; Natalia Ivanova; Nikos C. Kyrpides

The Integrated Microbial Genomes (IMG) data warehouse integrates genomes from all three domains of life, as well as plasmids, viruses and genome fragments. IMG provides tools for analyzing and reviewing the structural and functional annotations of genomes in a comparative context. IMG’s data content and analytical capabilities have increased continuously since its first version released in 2005. Since the last report published in the 2012 NAR Database Issue, IMG’s annotation and data integration pipelines have evolved while new tools have been added for recording and analyzing single cell genomes, RNA Seq and biosynthetic cluster data. Different IMG datamarts provide support for the analysis of publicly available genomes (IMG/W: http://img.jgi.doe.gov/w), expert review of genome annotations (IMG/ER: http://img.jgi.doe.gov/er) and teaching and training in the area of microbial genome analysis (IMG/EDU: http://img.jgi.doe.gov/edu).


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

The integrated microbial genomes (IMG) system

Victor Markowitz; Frank Korzeniewski; Krishna Palaniappan; Ernest Szeto; Greg Werner; Anu Padki; Xueling Zhao; Inna Dubchak; Philip Hugenholtz; Iain Anderson; Athanasios Lykidis; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; Nikos C. Kyrpides

The integrated microbial genomes (IMG) system is a new data management and analysis platform for microbial genomes provided by the Joint Genome Institute (JGI). IMG contains both draft and complete JGI genomes integrated with other publicly available microbial genomes of all three domains of life. IMG provides tools and viewers for analyzing genomes, genes and functions, individually or in a comparative context. IMG allows users to focus their analysis on subsets of genes and genomes of interest and to save the results of their analysis. IMG is available at .


Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews | 2008

A Bioinformatician's Guide to Metagenomics

Victor Kunin; Alex Copeland; Alla Lapidus; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Philip Hugenholtz

SUMMARY As random shotgun metagenomic projects proliferate and become the dominant source of publicly available sequence data, procedures for the best practices in their execution and analysis become increasingly important. Based on our experience at the Joint Genome Institute, we describe the chain of decisions accompanying a metagenomic project from the viewpoint of the bioinformatic analysis step by step. We guide the reader through a standard workflow for a metagenomic project beginning with presequencing considerations such as community composition and sequence data type that will greatly influence downstream analyses. We proceed with recommendations for sampling and data generation including sample and metadata collection, community profiling, construction of shotgun libraries, and sequencing strategies. We then discuss the application of generic sequence processing steps (read preprocessing, assembly, and gene prediction and annotation) to metagenomic data sets in contrast to genome projects. Different types of data analyses particular to metagenomes are then presented, including binning, dominant population analysis, and gene-centric analysis. Finally, data management issues are presented and discussed. We hope that this review will assist bioinformaticians and biologists in making better-informed decisions on their journey during a metagenomic project.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

IMG/M: a data management and analysis system for metagenomes

Victor Markowitz; Natalia Ivanova; Ernest Szeto; Krishna Palaniappan; Ken Chu; Daniel Dalevi; I-Min A. Chen; Yuri Grechkin; Inna Dubchak; Iain Anderson; Athanasios Lykidis; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Philip Hugenholtz; Nikos C. Kyrpides

IMG/M is a data management and analysis system for microbial community genomes (metagenomes) hosted at the Department of Energys (DOE) Joint Genome Institute (JGI). IMG/M consists of metagenome data integrated with isolate microbial genomes from the Integrated Microbial Genomes (IMG) system. IMG/M provides IMGs comparative data analysis tools extended to handle metagenome data, together with metagenome-specific analysis tools. IMG/M is available at http://img.jgi.doe.gov/m


Nature Methods | 2007

Use of simulated data sets to evaluate the fidelity of metagenomic processing methods

Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; Kerrie Barry; Harris Shapiro; Eugene Goltsman; Alice C. McHardy; Isidore Rigoutsos; Asaf Salamov; Frank Korzeniewski; Miriam Land; Alla Lapidus; Igor V. Grigoriev; Paul G. Richardson; Philip Hugenholtz; Nikos C. Kyrpides

Metagenomics is a rapidly emerging field of research for studying microbial communities. To evaluate methods presently used to process metagenomic sequences, we constructed three simulated data sets of varying complexity by combining sequencing reads randomly selected from 113 isolate genomes. These data sets were designed to model real metagenomes in terms of complexity and phylogenetic composition. We assembled sampled reads using three commonly used genome assemblers (Phrap, Arachne and JAZZ), and predicted genes using two popular gene-finding pipelines (fgenesb and CRITICA/GLIMMER). The phylogenetic origins of the assembled contigs were predicted using one sequence similarity–based (blast hit distribution) and two sequence composition–based (PhyloPythia, oligonucleotide frequencies) binning methods. We explored the effects of the simulated community structure and method combinations on the fidelity of each processing step by comparison to the corresponding isolate genomes. The simulated data sets are available online to facilitate standardized benchmarking of tools for metagenomic analysis.Please visit methagora to view and post comments on this article


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

The integrated microbial genomes system: an expanding comparative analysis resource

Victor Markowitz; I-Min A. Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Ken Chu; Ernest Szeto; Yuri Grechkin; Anna Ratner; Iain Anderson; Athanasios Lykidis; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; Nikos C. Kyrpides

The integrated microbial genomes (IMG) system serves as a community resource for comparative analysis of publicly available genomes in a comprehensive integrated context. IMG contains both draft and complete microbial genomes integrated with other publicly available genomes from all three domains of life, together with a large number of plasmids and viruses. IMG provides tools and viewers for analyzing and reviewing the annotations of genes and genomes in a comparative context. Since its first release in 2005, IMG’s data content and analytical capabilities have been constantly expanded through regular releases. Several companion IMG systems have been set up in order to serve domain specific needs, such as expert review of genome annotations. IMG is available at http://img.jgi.doe.gov.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

The integrated microbial genomes (IMG) system in 2007: data content and analysis tool extensions

Victor Markowitz; Ernest Szeto; Krishna Palaniappan; Yuri Grechkin; Ken Chu; I-Min A. Chen; Inna Dubchak; Iain Anderson; Athanasios Lykidis; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; Nikos C. Kyrpides

The integrated microbial genomes (IMG) system is a data management, analysis and annotation platform for all publicly available genomes. IMG contains both draft and complete JGI microbial genomes integrated with all other publicly available genomes from all three domains of life, together with a large number of plasmids and viruses. IMG provides tools and viewers for analyzing and annotating genomes, genes and functions, individually or in a comparative context. Since its first release in 2005, IMGs data content and analytical capabilities have been constantly expanded through quarterly releases. IMG is provided by the DOE-Joint Genome Institute (JGI) and is available from http://img.jgi.doe.gov.

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Natalia Ivanova

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Amrita Pati

Joint Genome Institute

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Lynne Goodwin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Krishna Palaniappan

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Sam Pitluck

Joint Genome Institute

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Amy Chen

Joint Genome Institute

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Matt Nolan

Joint Genome Institute

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Susan Lucas

Joint Genome Institute

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Miriam Land

University of California

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Alla Lapidus

University of California

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