"Trivial" Error in Celera Fly Genome 7
In "one of the most petty and ridiculous issues ever in the history of science" - according to the guilty company's chief scientific officer - federal officials noticed that when
Celera
uploaded genetic sequences of the fruit fly to a
public database,
there was some
human DNA mixed in.
It's now been removed, and everyone seems to think this is not a very significant error. But the harsh exchange and defensive posturing on both sides underscores the edgy rivalry between the government group's slow-and-steady approach and Celera's "shotgun" approach to mapping the human genome. This story is also important because mixing human genes into a fly's genes is freaky cool - someone should make a movie about that.
Favourite "Fly Crossed With Human" Movie (Score:1)
Open Source Applies Here Too (Score:1)
It seems that the principle advantage of open source software is a principle of open source information as well.
freaky cool (Score:1)
A little more info, from Nature... (Score:2)
Drosophila genome contaminated with human sequence
[WASHINGTON] Computational biologists at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) have discovered about 150,000 bases of human DNA mixed in with the genomic sequence of the fruitfly Drosophila compiled by Celera Genomics of Rockville, Maryland, and the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (BDGP).
Scientists working with the data were downplaying the significance of the contamination last week. David Lipman, NCBI director, says that the figure should be seen in the context of the approximately 180 million bases of the fly genome.
Lipman adds that the errant data were in a part of the database holding 'unassigned scaffolds', not the labelled part of known fly chromosomes. "We found no evidence of any contamination in the main body of fly sequence data," he says.
Researchers at Celera and the BDGP had previously pointed out that some of the unassigned sequence might contain foreign DNA. They have requested a correction in Science, which published the Drosophila sequence last month. Gerald Rubin, leader of the BDGP, has been quoted as describing the contamination as "trivial".
Re:It's the less obvious errors that worry scienti (Score:2)
Errors not so uncommon. (Score:2)
It's the less obvious errors that worry scientists (Score:3)
I think the problem here (Besides egos and bad blood) is that some scientists are still suspicious of Celera's motives and methods, and that they wonder if sometime in the future Celera could (whether accidentally or on purpose) release corrupted data that would be much harder to detect.