Abstract

Amplicon sequencing utilizing next-generation platforms has significantly transformed how research is conducted, specifically microbial ecology. However, primer and sequencing platform biases can confound or change the way scientists interpret these data. The Pacific Biosciences RSII instrument may also preferentially load smaller fragments, which may also be a function of PCR product exhaustion during sequencing. To further examine theses biases, data is provided from 16S rRNA rumen community analyses. Specifically, data from the relative phylum-level abundances for the ruminal bacterial community are provided to determine between-sample variability. Direct sequencing of metagenomic DNA was conducted to circumvent primer-associated biases in 16S rRNA reads and rarefaction curves were generated to demonstrate adequate coverage of each amplicon. PCR products were also subjected to reduced amplification and pooling to reduce the likelihood of PCR product exhaustion during sequencing on the Pacific Biosciences platform. The taxonomic profiles for the relative phylum-level and genus-level abundance of rumen microbiota as a function of PCR pooling for sequencing on the Pacific Biosciences RSII platform were provided. For more information, see “Evaluation of 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing using two next-generation sequencing technologies for phylogenetic analysis of the rumen bacterial community in steers” P.R. Myer, M. Kim, H.C. Freetly, T.P.L. Smith (2016) [1].

Highlights

  • Data accessibilityFurther evaluation of sequencing depth of ruminal metagenomic DNA from steers

  • Metagenomic and near full-length 16S rRNA sequence data in support of the phylogenetic analysis of the rumen bacterial community in steers

  • The Pacific Biosciences RSII instrument may preferentially load smaller fragments, which may be a function of Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) product exhaustion during sequencing

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Summary

Data accessibility

Further evaluation of sequencing depth of ruminal metagenomic DNA from steers. Greater understanding of potential PCR product exhaustion during sequencing on resultant taxonomic analyses. A complete description of the data and methods is presented elsewhere [1]

Experimental design and rumen sampling
Sequence read processing and analysis
Full Text
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