Abstract

Bacterial genome data are accumulating at an unprecedented speed due to the routine use of sequencing in clinical diagnoses, public health surveillance, and population genetics studies. Genealogical reconstruction is fundamental to many of these uses; however, inferring genealogy from large-scale genome data sets quickly, accurately, and flexibly is still a challenge. Here, we extend an alignment- and annotation-free method, PopPUNK, to increase its flexibility and interpretability across data sets. Our method, iterative-PopPUNK, rapidly produces multiple consistent cluster assignments across a range of sequence identities. By constructing a partially resolved genealogical tree with respect to these clusters, users can select a resolution most appropriate for their needs. We showed the accuracy of clusters at all levels of similarity and genealogical inference of iterative-PopPUNK based on simulated data and obtained phylogenetically concordant results in real data sets from seven bacterial species. Using two example sets of Escherichia/Shigella and Vibrio parahaemolyticus genomes, we show that iterative-PopPUNK can achieve cluster resolutions ranging from phylogroup down to sequence typing (ST). The iterative-PopPUNK algorithm is implemented in the "PopPUNK_iterate" program, available as part of the PopPUNK package.

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