Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.

There has been a rapid proliferation of approaches for processing and manipulating second generation DNA sequence data. However, users are often left with uncertainties about how the choice of processing methods may impact biological interpretation of data. In this report, we probe differences in ou...

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Main Authors: Matthew G Bakker, Zheng J Tu, James M Bradeen, Linda L Kinkel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3431371?pdf=render
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author Matthew G Bakker
Zheng J Tu
James M Bradeen
Linda L Kinkel
author_facet Matthew G Bakker
Zheng J Tu
James M Bradeen
Linda L Kinkel
author_sort Matthew G Bakker
collection DOAJ
description There has been a rapid proliferation of approaches for processing and manipulating second generation DNA sequence data. However, users are often left with uncertainties about how the choice of processing methods may impact biological interpretation of data. In this report, we probe differences in output between two different processing pipelines: a de-noising approach using the AmpliconNoise algorithm for error correction, and a standard approach using quality filtering and preclustering to reduce error. There was a large overlap in reads culled by each method, although AmpliconNoise removed a greater net number of reads. Most OTUs produced by one method had a clearly corresponding partner in the other. Although each method resulted in OTUs consisting entirely of reads that were culled by the other method, there were many more such OTUs formed in the standard pipeline. Total OTU richness was reduced by AmpliconNoise processing, but per-sample OTU richness, diversity and evenness were increased. Increases in per-sample richness and diversity may be a result of AmpliconNoise processing producing a more even OTU rank-abundance distribution. Because communities were randomly subsampled to equalize sample size across communities, and because rare sequence variants are less likely to be selected during subsampling, fewer OTUs were lost from individual communities when subsampling AmpliconNoise-processed data. In contrast to taxon-based diversity estimates, phylogenetic diversity was reduced even on a per-sample basis by de-noising, and samples switched widely in diversity rankings. This work illustrates the significant impacts of processing pipelines on the biological interpretations that can be made from pyrosequencing surveys. This study provides important cautions for analyses of contemporary data, for requisite data archiving (processed vs. non-processed data), and for drawing comparisons among studies performed using distinct data processing pipelines.
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spelling doaj.art-b3b495ee78364c4c961747abe3caa1fc2022-12-22T01:23:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0178e4435710.1371/journal.pone.0044357Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.Matthew G BakkerZheng J TuJames M BradeenLinda L KinkelThere has been a rapid proliferation of approaches for processing and manipulating second generation DNA sequence data. However, users are often left with uncertainties about how the choice of processing methods may impact biological interpretation of data. In this report, we probe differences in output between two different processing pipelines: a de-noising approach using the AmpliconNoise algorithm for error correction, and a standard approach using quality filtering and preclustering to reduce error. There was a large overlap in reads culled by each method, although AmpliconNoise removed a greater net number of reads. Most OTUs produced by one method had a clearly corresponding partner in the other. Although each method resulted in OTUs consisting entirely of reads that were culled by the other method, there were many more such OTUs formed in the standard pipeline. Total OTU richness was reduced by AmpliconNoise processing, but per-sample OTU richness, diversity and evenness were increased. Increases in per-sample richness and diversity may be a result of AmpliconNoise processing producing a more even OTU rank-abundance distribution. Because communities were randomly subsampled to equalize sample size across communities, and because rare sequence variants are less likely to be selected during subsampling, fewer OTUs were lost from individual communities when subsampling AmpliconNoise-processed data. In contrast to taxon-based diversity estimates, phylogenetic diversity was reduced even on a per-sample basis by de-noising, and samples switched widely in diversity rankings. This work illustrates the significant impacts of processing pipelines on the biological interpretations that can be made from pyrosequencing surveys. This study provides important cautions for analyses of contemporary data, for requisite data archiving (processed vs. non-processed data), and for drawing comparisons among studies performed using distinct data processing pipelines.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3431371?pdf=render
spellingShingle Matthew G Bakker
Zheng J Tu
James M Bradeen
Linda L Kinkel
Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.
PLoS ONE
title Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.
title_full Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.
title_fullStr Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.
title_full_unstemmed Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.
title_short Implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation.
title_sort implications of pyrosequencing error correction for biological data interpretation
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3431371?pdf=render
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