Tag: Nucleotide BLAST (blastn)

Now Available! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection

Now Available! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection

Download the updated bacterial and archaeal reference genome collection! We built this collection of 19,328 genomes by selecting the “best” genome assembly for each species among the 350,000+ prokaryotic genomes in RefSeq (except for E. coli for which two assemblies were selected as reference).

What’s New?
  • 413 species are represented in this collection for the first time
  • 198 species are represented by a better assembly
  • 27 species were removed because of changes in NCBI Taxonomy or uncertainty in their species assignment 

Continue reading “Now Available! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection”

Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genome Collection is Available!

Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genome Collection is Available!

Download the updated bacterial and archaeal reference genome collection! This collection (18,941 genomes as of Jan 18, 2024) was built by selecting the “best” genome assembly for each species among the 330,000+ prokaryotic genomes in RefSeq (except for E. coli for which two assemblies were selected as reference). You can speed up your sequence searches by running them against these high-quality genomes instead of the entire nucleotide or protein database.

The criteria for selecting the reference assembly for a given species include assembly contiguity and completeness and quality of the RefSeq annotation. Continue reading “Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genome Collection is Available!”

Now Available! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection

Now Available! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection

An updated bacterial and archaeal reference genome collection is available! This collection of 18,343 genomes was built by selecting exactly one genome assembly for each species among the 312,000+ prokaryotic genomes in RefSeq, except for E. coli for which two assemblies were selected as reference.

The criteria for selecting the reference assembly for a given species include assembly contiguity and completeness and quality of the RefSeq annotation. 

What’s new?
  • 790 species were added to the collection
  • 199 species are represented by a better assembly (compared to the April 2023 release)
  • 70 species were removed because of changes in NCBI Taxonomy or uncertainty in their species assignment 

Continue reading “Now Available! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection”

Now Available! Faster BLAST Searches with New Nucleotide Databases

Now Available! Faster BLAST Searches with New Nucleotide Databases

NEW in BLAST! We made smaller nucleotide databases to help you find the sequences you need faster and easier. You can now find these databases on the main nucleotide BLAST search page (Figure 1) and even download them (Databases: nt_euk, nt_prok, nt_viruses, nt_others). They are separated by organism type, such as eukaryotes, prokaryotes, viruses, and others (including synthetic sequences).

Figure 1. The database selection section of the main nucleotide BLAST page with the ‘Experimental databases’ radio button selected. You can choose one or more of the organism database subsets for your search.  Continue reading “Now Available! Faster BLAST Searches with New Nucleotide Databases”

New Release! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection Now Available

New Release! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection Now Available

As previously announced, we are continuously curating a better Prokaryotic Reference Genomes Collection. An updated bacterial and archaeal reference genome collection is now available! This collection of 17,623 genomes was built by selecting exactly one genome assembly for each species among the 283,000+ prokaryotic genomes in RefSeq, except for E. coli for which two assemblies were selected as reference. 

What’s new?
  • 480 species were added to this collection 
  • 178 species are represented by a better assembly 
  • 17 species were removed due to changes in NCBI Taxonomy or uncertainty in their species assignment 

Continue reading “New Release! Updated Bacterial and Archaeal Reference Genomes Collection Now Available”

Updated bacterial and archaeal reference genomes collection now available!

Updated bacterial and archaeal reference genomes collection now available!

An updated bacterial and archaeal reference genome collection is available! This collection of 17,163 genomes was built by selecting exactly one genome assembly for each species among the 272,000+ prokaryotic genomes in RefSeq, except for E. coli for which two assemblies were selected as reference.

A total of 497 species are included in this collection for the first time. In addition, comparing to the October 2022 set, 174 species are represented by a better assembly and 15 species were removed because of changes in NCBI Taxonomy or uncertainty in their species assignment. The criteria for selecting one assembly for a given species from all assemblies available in RefSeq for the species include assembly contiguity and completeness and quality of the RefSeq annotation. See the documentation for details.

We have updated the nucleotide BLAST RefSeq reference genomes database (fourth in the menu) as well as the database on the Microbial Nucleotide BLAST page to reflect these changes. You can also run BLAST searches against the proteins annotated on these reference genomes (RefSeq Select proteins database, second in the menu).

Re-evaluating the BLAST Nucleotide Database (nt)

Re-evaluating the BLAST Nucleotide Database (nt)

The ongoing sequencing revolution has resulted in exponential growth of the NCBI BLAST databases. The default BLAST nucleotide database (nt), the most popular Web BLAST database, is currently 903 billion letters and continues to grow rapidly – doubling in size in the last year. This growth will cause longer search times, reduced capacity, and more delays in updating the database. In the not-too-distant future, searching the entire nt database on the web will no longer be possible unless we modify the database scope and composition.

Because of the above concerns, we want to make the default Web BLAST nucleotide database smaller and more efficient. Some options are to:

    • Change its composition to improve the quality of sequence entries included
    • Take steps to slow its growth rate
    • Divide it into several databases by biological or functional categories

Continue reading “Re-evaluating the BLAST Nucleotide Database (nt)”

Now available: Updated prokaryote representative genomes collection

Now available: Updated prokaryote representative genomes collection

An updated bacterial and archaeal representative genomes collection is available! We selected a total of 16,665 of the 262,000 prokaryotic assemblies in RefSeq to represent their respective species. For the first time, more complete assemblies (as calculated by CheckM) were ranked higher than less complete assemblies. See the ranked list of criteria for selecting representative assemblies here. Continue reading “Now available: Updated prokaryote representative genomes collection”

Announcing an updated prokaryotic representative genomes collection with 706 new species!

Announcing an updated prokaryotic representative genomes collection with 706 new species!

An updated bacterial and archaeal representative genomes collection is available! A total of 16,105 assemblies among the 249,000 prokaryotic assemblies in RefSeq were selected to represent their respective species. The collection has grown by 3.7% since January 2022. A total of 706 species are represented for the first time. In addition, 186 species are represented by a better assembly, and 124 species were removed because of changes in NCBI Taxonomy or uncertainty in their species assignment.

We updated the database on the Microbial Nucleotide BLAST page as well as the basic nucleotide BLAST RefSeq Representative genomes database (fourth in the menu) to reflect these changes. Finally, remember that you can now run BLAST searches against the proteins annotated on representative genomes (second in the menu). See more info here.

BLAST+ 2.13.0 now available with SRA BLAST, ARM Linux executables, and database metadata

BLAST+ 2.13.0 now available with SRA BLAST, ARM Linux executables, and database metadata

BLAST+ 2.13.0  includes several important new features including SRA BLAST programs, ARM Linux executables, and the ability to produce database metadata as well as some important improvements, and a few bug fixes.  You can download the new BLAST release from the FTP site.

New features

SRA / WGS BLAST (blastn_vdb, tblastn_vdb)

Beginning with this release, the BLAST distribution now includes the SRA BLAST programs  blastn_vdb and tblastn_vdb that can directly search SRA and WGS projects without the need to build a BLAST database. See the BLAST documentation on how to use these programs with WGS projects.

ARM Linux executables

This release also includes executables compiled under ARM Linux for the first time. Please let us know if you find any issues with ARM Linux programs.

Database metadata in JSON format

Starting with BLAST+ 2.13.0, the makeblastdb program generates an additional file with the file extension .njs for nucleotide databases or .pjs  for protein databases. These files contain BLAST database metadata in JSON format. See the BLAST database metadata section in the BLAST User Manual for an example. This file can be easily read by many tools and makes the BLAST database more compliant with FAIR principles.

See the release notes for more details on improvements and bug fixes for the release.

Important reminder about usage reporting

As we announced previously, BLAST can report limited usage information back to NCBI. This information shows us whether BLAST+ is being used by the community, and therefore is worth being maintained and developed.  It also allows us to focus our development efforts on the most used aspects of BLAST+.  Please help us improve BLAST by allowing BLAST to share information about your search. The BLAST privacy statement  provides details on the information collected, how it is used, and how to opt-out of reporting if you don’t want to participate.