New Genome Portal provides access to reference-quality genomes

ATCC aim to increase confidence in research with its new genome database

20 Oct 2019
Cameron Smith-Craig
Cameron Smith-Craig
Pharma and Applied Sciences Editor

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ATCC has launched its new ATCC Genome Portal, a publicly available database of reference-quality genome sequences matched to authenticated ATCC biological materials that will help researchers interpret and reproduce their results with confidence.

The portal, which launched with an initial 250 genome sequences of widely used bacterial strains, delivers on ATCC’s Enhanced Authentication Initiative, a component of the first of five core pledges under the Incredible 2020 Initiative aimed at increasing reproducibility in biological research. Current publicly available genomic sequences lack authenticity, quality, completeness, or traceability, which can compromise results. This problem is exacerbated by the absence of standardized methods for developing and validating reference-quality genome sequences.

ATCC addressed this issue by developing a standardized workflow for generating reference-quality genomes. Starting with low-passaged, authenticated ATCC materials and using a standardized next-generation sequencing and hybrid assembly approach, ATCC produced complete reference-quality genomes by combining highly accurate short reads with the scaffolding ability of ultra-long reads. Each step of this workflow undergoes rigorous quality control analyses to ensure that the data proceeding to the next step are the highest quality possible — only data that pass all quality control criteria are published to the ATCC Genome Portal.

“For scientists to accurately interpret their results and make insightful correlations with in silico models, they need access to rigorously validated reference genomes that are tied back to credible biological materials,” said Joseph Leonelli, Ph.D., Vice President, ATCC Federal Solutions. “Through our Enhanced Authentication Initiative, we have identified the key challenges with existing publicly available data and have developed a solution for improving the quality of reference genome sequences. We are excited and proud to be able to offer this resource to the scientific community,” said Dr. Leonelli.

Researchers can download high-quality genome sequences for use in bioinformatic analyses, view annotated data, and search for genomes using their own data. ATCC will continuously update the portal with additional genomes as they become available.

You can register for the ATCC Genome Portal and explore the database by clicking here.

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