Diatom DNA metabarcoding for ecological assessment: Comparison among bioinformatics pipelines used in six European countries reveals the need for standardization
CHONOVA, Teofana
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
FRANC, Alain
Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés [BioGeCo]
Pleiade, from patterns to models in computational biodiversity and biotechnology [PLEIADE]
Biodiversité, Gènes & Communautés [BioGeCo]
Pleiade, from patterns to models in computational biodiversity and biotechnology [PLEIADE]
VASSELON, Valentin
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
< Leer menos
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Idioma
en
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
Science of the Total Environment. 2020-11, vol. 745, p. 140948
Elsevier
Resumen en inglés
Ecological assessment of lakes and rivers using benthic diatom assemblages currently requires considerable taxonomic expertise to identify species using light microscopy. This traditional approach is also time-consuming. ...Leer más >
Ecological assessment of lakes and rivers using benthic diatom assemblages currently requires considerable taxonomic expertise to identify species using light microscopy. This traditional approach is also time-consuming. Diatom metabarcoding is a promising alternative and there is increasing interest in using this approach for routine assessment. However, until now, analysis protocols for diatom metabarcoding have been developed and optimised by research groups working in isolation. The diversity of existing bioinformatics methods highlights the need for an assessment of the performance and comparability of results of different methods. The aim of this study was to test the correspondence of outputs from six bioinformatics pipelines currently in use for diatom metabarcoding in different European countries. Raw sequence data from 29 biofilm samples were treated by each of the bioinformatics pipelines, five of them using the same curated reference database. The outputs of the pipelines were compared in terms of sequence unit assemblages, taxonomic assignment, biotic index score and ecological assessment outcomes. The three last components were also compared to outputs from traditional light microscopy, which is currently accepted for ecological assessment of phytobenthos, as required by the Water Framework Directive. We also tested the performance of the pipelines on the two DNA markers (rbcL and 185-V4) that are currently used by the working groups participating in this study. The sequence unit assemblages produced by different pipelines showed significant differences in terms of assigned and unassigned read numbers and sequence unit numbers. When comparing the taxonomic assignments at genus and species level, correspondence of the taxonomic assemblages between pipelines was weak. Most discrepancies were linked to differential detection or quantification of taxa, despite the use of the same reference database. Subsequent calculation of biotic index scores also showed significant differences between approaches, which were reflected in the final ecological assessment. Use of the rbcL marker always resulted in better correlation among molecular datasets and also in results closer to these generated using traditional microscopy. This study shows that decisions made in pipeline design have implications for the dataset's structure and the taxonomic assemblage, which in turn may affect biotic index calculation and ecological assessment. There is a need to define best-practice bioinformatics parameters in order to ensure the best representation of diatom assemblages. Only the use of similar parameters will ensure the compatibility of data from different working groups. The future of diatom metabarcoding for ecological assessment may also lie in the development of new metrics using, for example, presence/absence instead of relative abundance data.< Leer menos
Palabras clave en inglés
Bacillariophyta
Biomonitoring
Metabarcoding
Morphological identification
rbcL
18S-V4
Orígen
Importado de HalCentros de investigación