articlePLoS ONEDec 20, 2006GOLD OA

Taxonomic Reliability of DNA Sequences in Public Sequence Databases: A Fungal Perspective

University of Gothenburg · Chalmers University of Technology · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

DNA sequences are increasingly seen as one of the primary information sources for species identification in many organism groups. Such approaches, popularly known as barcoding, are underpinned by the assumption that the reference databases used for comparison are sufficiently complete and feature correctly and informatively annotated entries. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The present study uses a large set of fungal DNA sequences from the inclusive International Nucleotide Sequence Database to show that the taxon sampling of fungi is far from complete, that about 20% of the entries may be incorrectly identified to species level, and that the majority of entries lack descriptive and up-to-date annotations.

Conclusions

The problems with taxonomic reliability and insufficient annotations in public DNA repositories form a tangible obstacle to sequence-based species identification, and it is manifest that the greatest challenges to biological barcoding will be of taxonomical, rather than technical, nature.

Citation impact

662
total citations
FWCI
23.29
Percentile
100%
References
26
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Identification (biology)
  • DNA barcoding
  • Biology
  • Taxonomic rank
  • Perspective (graphical)
  • Sequence (biology)
  • DNA sequencing
  • Sequence database
No related works found for this paper.