Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions

Abstract Background Contamination is a well-known but often neglected problem in molecular biology. Here, we investigated the prevalence of cross-contamination among 446 samples from 116 distinct species of animals, which were processed in the same laboratory and subjected to subcontracted transcrip...

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Main Authors: Marion Ballenghien, Nicolas Faivre, Nicolas Galtier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-03-01
Series:BMC Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-017-0366-6
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spelling doaj-6d54f153eedb4b45906abb21665f0f552020-11-25T00:45:58ZengBMCBMC Biology1741-70072017-03-0115111610.1186/s12915-017-0366-6Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutionsMarion Ballenghien0Nicolas Faivre1Nicolas Galtier2UMR5554 – Institute of Evolutionary Sciences, University Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, EPHEUMR5554 – Institute of Evolutionary Sciences, University Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, EPHEUMR5554 – Institute of Evolutionary Sciences, University Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, EPHEAbstract Background Contamination is a well-known but often neglected problem in molecular biology. Here, we investigated the prevalence of cross-contamination among 446 samples from 116 distinct species of animals, which were processed in the same laboratory and subjected to subcontracted transcriptome sequencing. Results Using cytochrome oxidase 1 as a barcode, we identified a minimum of 782 events of between-species contamination, with approximately 80% of our samples being affected. An analysis of laboratory metadata revealed a strong effect of the sequencing center: nearly all the detected events of between-species contamination involved species that were sent the same day to the same company. We introduce new methods to address the amount of within-species, between-individual contamination, and to correct for this problem when calling genotypes from base read counts. Conclusions We report evidence for pervasive within-species contamination in this data set, and show that classical population genomic statistics, such as synonymous diversity, the ratio of non-synonymous to synonymous diversity, inbreeding coefficient FIT, and Tajima’s D, are sensitive to this problem to various extents. Control analyses suggest that our published results are probably robust to the problem of contamination. Recommendations on how to prevent or avoid contamination in large-scale population genomics/molecular ecology are provided based on this analysis.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-017-0366-6RNAseqTranscriptomeAnimalsSNP callingGenotypingWithin-species
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marion Ballenghien
Nicolas Faivre
Nicolas Galtier
spellingShingle Marion Ballenghien
Nicolas Faivre
Nicolas Galtier
Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
BMC Biology
RNAseq
Transcriptome
Animals
SNP calling
Genotyping
Within-species
author_facet Marion Ballenghien
Nicolas Faivre
Nicolas Galtier
author_sort Marion Ballenghien
title Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
title_short Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
title_full Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
title_fullStr Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
title_sort patterns of cross-contamination in a multispecies population genomic project: detection, quantification, impact, and solutions
publisher BMC
series BMC Biology
issn 1741-7007
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Abstract Background Contamination is a well-known but often neglected problem in molecular biology. Here, we investigated the prevalence of cross-contamination among 446 samples from 116 distinct species of animals, which were processed in the same laboratory and subjected to subcontracted transcriptome sequencing. Results Using cytochrome oxidase 1 as a barcode, we identified a minimum of 782 events of between-species contamination, with approximately 80% of our samples being affected. An analysis of laboratory metadata revealed a strong effect of the sequencing center: nearly all the detected events of between-species contamination involved species that were sent the same day to the same company. We introduce new methods to address the amount of within-species, between-individual contamination, and to correct for this problem when calling genotypes from base read counts. Conclusions We report evidence for pervasive within-species contamination in this data set, and show that classical population genomic statistics, such as synonymous diversity, the ratio of non-synonymous to synonymous diversity, inbreeding coefficient FIT, and Tajima’s D, are sensitive to this problem to various extents. Control analyses suggest that our published results are probably robust to the problem of contamination. Recommendations on how to prevent or avoid contamination in large-scale population genomics/molecular ecology are provided based on this analysis.
topic RNAseq
Transcriptome
Animals
SNP calling
Genotyping
Within-species
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-017-0366-6
work_keys_str_mv AT marionballenghien patternsofcrosscontaminationinamultispeciespopulationgenomicprojectdetectionquantificationimpactandsolutions
AT nicolasfaivre patternsofcrosscontaminationinamultispeciespopulationgenomicprojectdetectionquantificationimpactandsolutions
AT nicolasgaltier patternsofcrosscontaminationinamultispeciespopulationgenomicprojectdetectionquantificationimpactandsolutions
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