Back to Search Start Over

The curse of the uncultured fungus

Authors :
Kessy Abarenkov
Erik Kristiansson
Martin Ryberg
Sandra Nogal-Prata
Daniela Gómez-Martínez
Katrin Stüer-Patowsky
Tobias Jansson
Sergei Põlme
Masoomeh Ghobad-Nejhad
Natàlia Corcoll
Ruud Scharn
Marisol Sánchez-García
Maryia Khomich
Christian Wurzbacher
R. Henrik Nilsson
Estonian Research Council
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
International Association for Plant Taxonomy
Source :
MycoKeys 86: 177-194, MycoKeys, Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname, MycoKeys, Vol 86, Iss, Pp 177-194 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Pensoft Publishers, 2022.

Abstract

The international DNA sequence databases abound in fungal sequences not annotated beyond the kingdom level, typically bearing names such as “uncultured fungus”. These sequences beget low-resolution mycological results and invite further deposition of similarly poorly annotated entries. What do these sequences represent? This study uses a 767,918-sequence corpus of public full-length fungal ITS sequences to estimate what proportion of the 95,055 “uncultured fungus” sequences that represent truly unidentifiable fungal taxa – and what proportion of them that would have been straightforward to annotate to some more meaningful taxonomic level at the time of sequence deposition. Our results suggest that more than 70% of these sequences would have been trivial to identify to at least the order/family level at the time of sequence deposition, hinting that factors other than poor availability of relevant reference sequences explain the low-resolution names. We speculate that researchers’ perceived lack of time and lack of insight into the ramifications of this problem are the main explanations for the low-resolution names. We were surprised to find that more than a fifth of these sequences seem to have been deposited by mycologists rather than researchers unfamiliar with the consequences of poorly annotated fungal sequences in molecular repositories. The proportion of these needlessly poorly annotated sequences does not decline over time, suggesting that this problem must not be left unchecked.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13144049 and 13144057
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
MycoKeys
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2cfc41604a180fe6e481ef4a409939fa