16 S rDNA primers and the unbiased assessment of thermophile diversity

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16 S rDNA primers and the unbiased assessment of thermophile diversity

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Title: 16 S rDNA primers and the unbiased assessment of thermophile diversity
Author: Baker, Gillian; Cowan, Donald A.
Inquiries: dcowan@uwc.ac.za
Abstract: Our understanding of thermophile diversity is based predominantly on PCR studies of community DNA. ‘Universal’ and domain-specific rRNA gene PCR primers have historically been used for the assessment of microbial diversity without adequate regard to the degree of specificity of primer pairs to different prokaryotic groups. In a reassessment of the published primers commonly used for ‘universal’ and archaeal 16 S rDNA sequence amplification we note that substantial variations in specificity exist. An unconsidered choice of primers may therefore lead to significant bias in determination of microbial community composition. In particular, Archaea-specific primer sequences typically lack specificity for the Korarchaeota and Nanoarchaea and are often biased towards certain clades. New primer pairs specifically designed for ‘universal’ archaeal 16 S rDNA sequence amplification, with homology to all four archaeal groups, have been designed. Here we present the application of these new primers for preparation of 16 S libraries from thermophile communities.
Subject: Microbial diversity assessment
Universal primers
Archaea
Archaea-specific primer sequences
Korarchaeota
Nanoarchaea
Primers for thermophile communities
Citation: Baker, G.C., Cowan, D.A. (2004). 16S rDNA primers and the unbiased assessment of thermophile diversity. Biochemical Society Transactions, 32:218-221   DOI 10.1007/s00792-008-0170-x
Rights: © 2004 Biochemical Society. The Society permits author to deposit a post-print.
Type: Article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10566/144
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00792-008-0170-x
Date: 2004
Peer reviewed: Yes
 

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