UCHIME improves sensitivity and speed of chimera detection

R. C. Edgar(Broad Institute), Brian J. Haas(Broad Institute), José C. Clemente(Broad Institute), Christopher Quince(Broad Institute), Rob Knight(Broad Institute)
Bioinformatics
June 23, 2011
Cited by 15,467Open Access
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Abstract

MOTIVATION: Chimeric DNA sequences often form during polymerase chain reaction amplification, especially when sequencing single regions (e.g. 16S rRNA or fungal Internal Transcribed Spacer) to assess diversity or compare populations. Undetected chimeras may be misinterpreted as novel species, causing inflated estimates of diversity and spurious inferences of differences between populations. Detection and removal of chimeras is therefore of critical importance in such experiments. RESULTS: We describe UCHIME, a new program that detects chimeric sequences with two or more segments. UCHIME either uses a database of chimera-free sequences or detects chimeras de novo by exploiting abundance data. UCHIME has better sensitivity than ChimeraSlayer (previously the most sensitive database method), especially with short, noisy sequences. In testing on artificial bacterial communities with known composition, UCHIME de novo sensitivity is shown to be comparable to Perseus. UCHIME is >100× faster than Perseus and >1000× faster than ChimeraSlayer. CONTACT: robert@drive5.com AVAILABILITY: Source, binaries and data: http://drive5.com/uchime. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


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