Is there any pairing info Genome <-> Plasmid in Genbank available?
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9.0 years ago
mschmid ▴ 180

If I have a bacterial genome in Genbank, how do I find the "corresponding" Plasmid? I am talking about projects where people sequenced the Genome and the Plasmids of a certain species.

Is there any specific information for that? Or do I have to infer it from the names? If there is any info on that: can the "matching" be automated?

genbank genome plasmid • 2.3k views
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9.0 years ago
piet ★ 1.9k

The sequences of all replicons of a bacterial isolate are linked to a common entry in the taxonomy database, and to a common entry in the biosample database. The genome of a bacterial cell may comprise several replicons, but the number of plasmids may vary within a species. Plasmids usually encode non-essential genes, and they can be acquired or lost.

If the accession of a sequence starts with AP, CP or BA, it is a complete replicon and it always has an associated entry in the taxonomy database. The entry in the taxonomy database refers to the bacterial isolate which has been sequenced, it is a sub-species entry. Example: pathogenic "Escherichia coli O157:H7 str. Sakai" having one chromosome and two plasmids

All newer full bacterial sequences are also linked a an associated entry in the biosample database. You can then use the biosample ID to find all replicons belonging to an isolate. Example: "Staphylococcus warneri SG" has one chromosome and 8 plasmids:

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Great, this already helps me a lot!

So if I automatically want to check if there is a plasmid found in the same project can I use NCBI's entrez?

If yes, could I find the Biosample entry via the accession number and from there the sequences associated? Would that work? Or what else would be a good automated search strategie?

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Yes, you can use Entrez esearch and elink to find the biosample assoziated with a given accession, and then vice visa all the nucleotide sequences assoziated with that biosample.

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