Non-biological synthetic spike-in controls and the AMPtk software pipeline improve mycobiome data

PeerJ. 2018 May 28:6:e4925. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4925. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

High-throughput amplicon sequencing (HTAS) of conserved DNA regions is a powerful technique to characterize microbial communities. Recently, spike-in mock communities have been used to measure accuracy of sequencing platforms and data analysis pipelines. To assess the ability of sequencing platforms and data processing pipelines using fungal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) amplicons, we created two ITS spike-in control mock communities composed of cloned DNA in plasmids: a biological mock community, consisting of ITS sequences from fungal taxa, and a synthetic mock community (SynMock), consisting of non-biological ITS-like sequences. Using these spike-in controls we show that: (1) a non-biological synthetic control (e.g., SynMock) is the best solution for parameterizing bioinformatics pipelines, (2) pre-clustering steps for variable length amplicons are critically important, (3) a major source of bias is attributed to the initial polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and thus HTAS read abundances are typically not representative of starting values. We developed AMPtk, a versatile software solution equipped to deal with variable length amplicons and quality filter HTAS data based on spike-in controls. While we describe herein a non-biological SynMock community for ITS sequences, the concept and AMPtk software can be widely applied to any HTAS dataset to improve data quality.

Keywords: Amplicon toolkit; Biodiversity; Environmental sequencing; Fungi; High-throughput amplicon sequencing; Metabarcoding; Mycobiome; Synthetic spike-in control; rRNA internal transcribed spacer.

Grants and funding

Funding was provided by the USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.