Skip to content

mdiricks/ntmdb

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

29 Commits
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

ntmdb

This repository hosts resistance databases for several non-tuberculous mycobacterial species as well as kmers which can be used to identify species. The databases are hosted on github to promote collaboration and knowledge sharing.

Want to contribute?

If you think a mutation/gene should be removed or added please raise and issue here.

Adding/removing mutations and genes

Mutations/genes for existing or new can be added by submitting a pull request on a fork. If that previous sentence made no sense to you then you can suggest a change using an issue and we will try help.

Why is there a seperate github repository?

With analysis pipelines pretty much standardised, it is evident that accuracy of prediction is affected mostly by the underlying library of mutations. As new evidence for the inclusion or exclusion of mutations is generated, there is a constant need to update and re-evaluate the mutation library. Moreover, it is important for the control of the library to be put in the hands of the end-users. By hosting the library on a separate repository (rather than buried deep in the profiling tool code) it makes it easier to find out exactly which mutations are present. Additionally, github has a number of useful features which can be utilised:

  • All changes to the library are tracked and can be easily be reverted to previous versions.
  • Users can raise concerns or discuss the library using the Issues section of the github repository.
  • Different versions of the library can be maintained using Forks. Allowing users to experiment with the library without affecting the main project. These changes can then be merged into the main repo after the changes are reviewed.
  • Multiple users/developers can contribute towards the library.

tl;dr - Hosting it here makes it easier to update the library.

It can be used as a direct input to NTM-Profiler, but can also be used for any custom pipeline.

How does it work?

The databases are hosted in db. The ntm_db.kmers.txt file contains the kmers which have been associated with different species. Subfolders, such as Mycobacteroides_abscessus, contain species specific resistance databases (look for the csv files), as well as the reference genome and annotation files as well as some other files which are used by NTM-Profiler.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published