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Article

Cross-Contamination Explains ¡°Inter and Intraspecific Horizontal Genetic Transfers¡± between Asexual Bdelloid Rotifers

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Citation

Wilson CG, Nowell RW & Barraclough TG (2018) Cross-Contamination Explains ¡°Inter and Intraspecific Horizontal Genetic Transfers¡± between Asexual Bdelloid Rotifers. Current Biology, 28 (15), pp. 2436-2444.e14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.05.070

Abstract
Summary A few metazoan lineages are thought to have persisted for millions of years without sexual reproduction. If so, they would offer important clues to the evolutionary paradox of sex itself [1, 2]. Most ¡°ancient asexuals¡± are subject to ongoing doubt because extant populations continue to invest in males [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]. However, males are famously unknown in bdelloid rotifers, a class of microscopic invertebrates comprising hundreds of species [10, 11, 12]. Bdelloid genomes have acquired an unusually high proportion of genes from non-metazoans via horizontal transfer [13, 14, 15, 16, 17]. This well-substantiated finding has invited speculation [13] that homologous horizontal transfer between bdelloid individuals also may occur, perhaps even ¡°replacing¡± sex [14]. In 2016, Current Biology published an article claiming to supply evidence for this idea. Debortoli et al. [18] sampled rotifers from natural populations and sequenced one mitochondrial and four nuclear loci. Species assignments were incongruent among loci for several samples, which was interpreted as evidence of ¡°interspecific horizontal genetic transfers.¡± Here, we use sequencing chromatograms supplied by the authors to demonstrate that samples treated as individuals actually contained two or more highly divergent mitochondrial and ribosomal sequences, revealing cross-contamination with DNA from multiple animals of different species. Other chromatograms indicate contamination with DNA from conspecific animals, explaining genetic and genomic evidence for ¡°intraspecific horizontal exchanges¡± reported in the same study. Given the clear evidence of contamination, the data and findings of Debortoli et al. [18] provide no reliable support for their conclusions that DNA is transferred horizontally between or within bdelloid species.

Keywords
DNA contamination; scientific experimental error; data accuracy; reproducibility of results; horizontal gene transfer; homologous recombination; polymerase chain reaction; genomics; molecular evolution; asexual reproduction

Journal
Current Biology: Volume 28, Issue 15

StatusPublished
Funders and
Publication date06/08/2018
Publication date online12/07/2018
Date accepted by journal23/05/2018
URL
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0960-9822
eISSN1879-0445

People (1)

Dr Reuben Nowell

Dr Reuben Nowell

Lecturer in Animal Evolutionary Biology, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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