I have a list of species for which I need to determine if they are known pathogens. What would be the most elegant way to do it?
Edit: I am more interested in Bacteria and Archea with reference to human. Thanks
I have a list of species for which I need to determine if they are known pathogens. What would be the most elegant way to do it?
Edit: I am more interested in Bacteria and Archea with reference to human. Thanks
See this inspiring post from Rod Page:
GenBank is a potentially rich source of information on host-parasite relationships. Often sequences of parasites will include information on the name of the host (the example I used was sequence AF131710 from the platyhelminth Ligophorus mugilinus, which records the host as the Flathead mullet Mugil cephalus).
FEATURES Location/Qualifiers
source 1..374
/organism="Ligophorus mugilinus"
/mol_type="genomic DNA"
/host="Mugil cephalus"
I was looking for to download all the genome sequences of all human pathogenic bacteria for last few days here. But no success so far. @Naga: When I click on the "link" to check "Pathogenic in" column, I discovered that the link doesn't work any longer. I didn't find the page. Can you guide me?
Seems summary table have been moved to a different folder.
Previous genome summary tables (lproks.cgi & leuks.cgi) will be discontinued on March 15, 2012. Use these instead: http://t.co/NRZvBuXR
— NCBI (@NCBI) March 8, 2012
ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/GENOME_REPORTS/ But these txt files doesn't have the "pathogen in" column. It is also not listed here in http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/browse/
As suggested in the linked-post, just do an empty search by selecting 'disease' in the drop down menu in PATRIC
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Bacteria only? Pathogens to human or in general?