Inherent bacterial DNA contamination of extraction and sequencing reagents may affect interpretation of microbiota in low bacterial biomass samples
Montana State University Billings · Showa University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
The advent and use of highly sensitive molecular biology techniques to explore the microbiota and microbiome in environmental and tissue samples have detected the presence of contaminating microbial DNA within reagents. These microbial DNA contaminants may distort taxonomic distributions and relative frequencies in microbial datasets, as well as contribute to erroneous interpretations and identifications.
We herein report on the occurrence of bacterial DNA contamination within commonly used DNA extraction kits and PCR reagents and the effect of these contaminates on data interpretation. When compared to previous reports, we identified an additional 88 bacterial genera as potential contaminants of molecular biology grade reagents, bringing the total number of known contaminating microbes to 181 genera. Many of the contaminants detected are considered normal inhabitants of the human gastrointestinal tract and the environment and are often indistinguishable from those genuinely present in the sample.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.80
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
5- AGAngela GlassingCorresponding
Montana State University Billings
- SEScot E. Dowd
Showa University
- SGSusan Galandiuk
University of Louisville
- BRBrian R. Davis
Texas Tech University, The University of Texas at El Paso, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
- RJRodrick J. Chiodini
Montana State University Billings, St. Vincent's HealthCare
Topics & keywords
- Contamination
- Biology
- DNA extraction
- Microbiome
- DNA
- Pyrosequencing
- Bacteria
- Microbiology
- Clean water and sanitation