Next-generation sequencing to inventory taxonomic diversity in eukaryotic communities: a test for freshwater diatoms
KERMARREC, Lenaïg
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Asconit Consultants
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Asconit Consultants
RIMET, Frédéric
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
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Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
KERMARREC, Lenaïg
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Asconit Consultants
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Asconit Consultants
RIMET, Frédéric
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
Centre Alpin de Recherche sur les Réseaux Trophiques et Ecosystèmes Limniques [CARRTEL]
BOUCHEZ, Agnes
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
Molecular Ecology Resources. 2013, vol. 13, n° 4, p. 607-619
Wiley/Blackwell
Resumen en inglés
The recent emergence of barcoding approaches coupled to those of next-generation sequencing (NGS) has raised new perspectives for studying environmental communities. In this framework, we tested the possibility to derive ...Leer más >
The recent emergence of barcoding approaches coupled to those of next-generation sequencing (NGS) has raised new perspectives for studying environmental communities. In this framework, we tested the possibility to derive accurate inventories of diatom communities from pyrosequencing outputs with an available DNA reference library. We used three molecular markers targeting the nuclear, chloroplast and mitochondrial genomes (SSU rDNA, rbcL and cox1) and three samples of a mock community composed of 30 known diatom strains belonging to 21 species. In the goal to detect methodological biases, one sample was constituted directly from pooled cultures, whereas the others consisted of pooled PCR products. The NGS reads obtained by pyrosequencing (Roche 454) were compared first to a DNA reference library including the sequences of all the species used to constitute the mock community, and second to a complete DNA reference library with a larger taxonomic coverage. A stringent taxonomic assignation gave inventories that were compared to the real one. We detected biases due to DNA extraction and PCR amplification that resulted in false-negative detection. Conversely, pyrosequencing errors appeared to generate false positives, especially in case of closely allied species. The taxonomic coverage of DNA reference libraries appears to be the most crucial factor, together with marker polymorphism which is essential to identify taxa at the species level. RbcL offers a high resolving power together with a large DNA reference library. Although needing further optimization, pyrosequencing is suitable for identifying diatom assemblages and may find applications in the field of freshwater biomonitoring.< Leer menos
Palabras clave
environmental communities
Palabras clave en inglés
benthic diatom diversity
high-throughput sequencing
molecular ecology
species inventories
Orígen
Importado de HalCentros de investigación