Introduction

The importance of 16S rRNA gene amplicon profiles for understanding the influence of microbes in a variety of environments coupled with the steep reduction in sequencing costs led to a surge of microbial sequencing projects. The expanding crowd of scientists and clinicians wanting to make use of sequencing datasets can choose among a range of multipurpose software platforms, the use of which can be intimidating for non-expert users. Among available pipeline options for high-throughput 16S rRNA gene analysis, the R programming language and software environment for statistical computing stands out for its power and increased flexibility, and the possibility to adhere to most recent best practices and to adjust to individual project needs. Here we present the Rhea pipeline, a set of R scripts that encode a series of well-documented choices for the downstream analysis of Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) tables, including normalization steps, alpha- and beta-diversity analysis, taxonomic composition, statistical comparisons, and calculation of correlations. Rhea is primarily a straightforward starting point for beginners, but can also be a framework for advanced users who can modify and expand the tool. As the community standards evolve, Rhea will adapt to always represent the current state-of-the-art in microbial profiles analysis in the clear and comprehensive way allowed by the R language. Rhea scripts and documentation are freely available at https://lagkouvardos.github.io/Rhea.

Publications

  1. Rhea: a transparent and modular R pipeline for microbial profiling based on 16S rRNA gene amplicons.
    Cite this
    Lagkouvardos I, Fischer S, Kumar N, Clavel T, 2017-01-01 - PeerJ

Credits

  1. Ilias Lagkouvardos
    Developer

    ZIEL-Core Facility Microbiome/NGS, Technical University of Munich, Germany

  2. Sandra Fischer
    Developer

    ZIEL-Core Facility Microbiome/NGS, Technical University of Munich, Germany

  3. Neeraj Kumar
    Developer

    ZIEL-Core Facility Microbiome/NGS, Technical University of Munich, Germany

  4. Thomas Clavel
    Investigator

    ZIEL-Core Facility Microbiome/NGS, Technical University of Munich, Germany

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Summary
AccessionBT006451
Tool TypeApplication
Category
PlatformsLinux/Unix
TechnologiesR
User InterfaceTerminal Command Line
Download Count0
Country/RegionGermany
Submitted ByThomas Clavel