A software tool 'CroCo' detects pervasive cross-species contamination in next generation sequencing data.

BMC Biol

Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution, Department of Genetics Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK.

Published: March 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study discusses the problem of cross contamination in RNA samples processed together before sequencing, which can adversely affect data analysis, particularly when samples from different species are involved.* -
  • The researchers introduced CroCo, a software tool that effectively identifies and removes contaminants from assembled transcriptomes, demonstrating its efficiency and accuracy using both real and simulated datasets.* -
  • The findings emphasize the widespread issue of contamination in transcriptome data and advocate for using CroCo as a necessary step in processing multiple samples to ensure reliable analyses.*

Article Abstract

Background: Multiple RNA samples are frequently processed together and often mixed before multiplex sequencing in the same sequencing run. While different samples can be separated post sequencing using sample barcodes, the possibility of cross contamination between biological samples from different species that have been processed or sequenced in parallel has the potential to be extremely deleterious for downstream analyses.

Results: We present CroCo, a software package for identifying and removing such cross contaminants from assembled transcriptomes. Using multiple, recently published sequence datasets, we show that cross contamination is consistently present at varying levels in real data. Using real and simulated data, we demonstrate that CroCo detects contaminants efficiently and correctly. Using a real example from a molecular phylogenetic dataset, we show that contaminants, if not eliminated, can have a decisive, deleterious impact on downstream comparative analyses.

Conclusions: Cross contamination is pervasive in new and published datasets and, if undetected, can have serious deleterious effects on downstream analyses. CroCo is a database-independent, multi-platform tool, designed for ease of use, that efficiently and accurately detects and removes cross contamination in assembled transcriptomes to avoid these problems. We suggest that the use of CroCo should become a standard cleaning step when processing multiple samples for transcriptome sequencing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5838952PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12915-018-0486-7DOI Listing

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