Nika Zajec (Author), Blaž Stres (Author), Gorazd Avguštin (Author)

Abstract

Comparative analyses of 16S rRNA clone libraries represent a standard tool in microbial ecology. Chimeric sequences are generally removed prior to such compariosns. A literature survey revealed a general pattern: (1) most commonly a single chimera identification approach (CIA) has been used; (2) putative chimeras have routinely been discarded without manual examination; (3) chimera filtered datasets have been submitted to repositories. To explore the effects of various CIAs on the study of microbial ß-diversity relationships using complete primary data, 4 bacterial and 4 archaeal clone libraries were generated from a submarine spring and analyzed together with 3 bacterial and 3 archaeal published primary datasets. The primary datasets were compared with their 8 different CIA filtered datasets using Chimera_check,CCODE, Pintail, Chimera Slayer and Ballerophon, the last with 4 different settings. When CIA filtered datasets were pooled accoring to the CIA used, no significant differnces between them could be observed, although there was not complete congruency between the different CIAs. When CIA filtered datasets of the same clone library were compared, generally no significant differences could be observed. In contrast, when CIA filtered datasets of different clone libraries were compared, the statistical significance of the relationships shifted from significant to insignificant orvice-versa in many cases depending on the CIA used. This precludes a correct identification of ß-diversity. To solve this problem, we treated all CIA filtered datasets and primary data of a single clone library as CIA replicated in non-parametric MANOVA. This enabled unambiguous delineation of environmental samples by taking into account all CIA introduced data modifications.

Keywords

mikrobiologija;molekularna genetika;himera;16S rRNA;

Data

Language: English
Year of publishing:
Typology: 1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization: UL BF - Biotechnical Faculty
UDC: 579:575
COBISS: 3022728 Link will open in a new window
ISSN: 0948-3055
Views: 1016
Downloads: 285
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Other data

Secondary language: English
Type (COBISS): Not categorized
Pages: str. 13-21, 10 str. pril.
Volume: ǂVol. ǂ66
Issue: ǂno. ǂ1
Chronology: 2012
DOI: 10.3354/ame01510
ID: 21671
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