articleApplied and Environmental MicrobiologyDec 1, 2005GREEN OA

At Least 1 in 20 16S rRNA Sequence Records Currently Held in Public Repositories Is Estimated To Contain Substantial Anomalies

Cardiff University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

A new method for detecting chimeras and other anomalies within 16S rRNA sequence records is presented. Using this method, we screened 1,399 sequences from 19 phyla, as defined by the Ribosomal Database Project, release 9, update 22, and found 5.0% to harbor substantial errors. Of these, 64.3% were obvious chimeras, 14.3% were unidentified sequencing errors, and 21.4% were highly degenerate. In all, 11 phyla contained obvious chimeras, accounting for 0.8 to 11% of the records for these phyla. Many chimeras (43.1%) were formed from parental sequences belonging to different phyla. While most comprised two fragments, 13.7% were composed of at least three fragments, often from three different sources. A separate…

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Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Phylum
  • Biology
  • Ribosomal RNA
  • 16S ribosomal RNA
  • Bacterial phyla
  • Sequence (biology)
  • Bacteroidetes
  • Genetics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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