Jose Fly
New member
Stumbled across this today...
The Salmonella In Silico Typing Resource (SISTR): An Open Web-Accessible Tool for Rapidly Typing and Subtyping Draft Salmonella Genome Assemblies
The researchers describe a new bioinformatics tool that allows for rapid sequencing and analysis of salmonella strains. And what framework is this tool based on? The authors tell us...
And of what use is this new tool? Again, the authors tell us...
The Salmonella In Silico Typing Resource (SISTR): An Open Web-Accessible Tool for Rapidly Typing and Subtyping Draft Salmonella Genome Assemblies
The researchers describe a new bioinformatics tool that allows for rapid sequencing and analysis of salmonella strains. And what framework is this tool based on? The authors tell us...
We show how phylogenetic context from cgMLST analysis can supplement the genoserotyping analysis and increase the accuracy of in silico serovar prediction to over 94.6% on a dataset comprised of 4,188 finished genomes and WGS draft assemblies.
For those who don't know, "phylogenetic context" means "evolutionary relatedness" (because phylogenetics is "the study of the evolutionary history and relationships among individuals or groups of organisms").And of what use is this new tool? Again, the authors tell us...
rapid in silico analysis of minimally processed draft genome assemblies provides a powerful approach for molecular epidemiology in support of public health investigations.
So much for that whole "evolution doesn't contribute to medicine" claptrap. :wave: