4.1 Article

COI-LIKE SEQUENCES ARE BECOMING PROBLEMATIC IN MOLECULAR SYSTEMATIC AND DNA BARCODING STUDIES

Journal

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 96-110

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1651/08-3020.1

Keywords

cytochrome c oxidise subunit I; molecular taxonomy; numt; protein-coding gene; pseudogene

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The cytochrome c oxidise subunit I (COI) gene plays a pivotal role in a global effort to document biodiversity and continues to be a gene of choice in phylogenetic and phylogeographic studies. Due to increased attention on this gene as a species' barcode, quality control and sequence homology issues are re-emerging. Taylor and Knouft (2006) attempted to examine gonopod morphology in light of the subgeneric classification scheme within the freshwater crayfish genus Orconectes using COI sequences. However, their erroneous analyses were not only based Oil supposed mitochondrial sequences but also incorporated many questionable sequences due to the possible presence of numts and manual editing or sequencing errors. In fact, 22 of the 86 sequences were flagged as COI-like by GenBank clue to the presence of stop colons and indels in what should be the open reading frame of a conservative protein-coding gene. A subsequent search of COI-like accessions in GenBank turned up a multitude of taxa across Crustacea from published and unpublished studies thereby warranting this illustrated discussion about quality control, pseudogenes, and sequence composition.

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