Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.

Continuous efforts to estimate actual diversity and to trace the species distribution and ranges in the natural environments have gone in equal pace with advancements of the technologies in the study of microbial species diversity from microscopic observations to DNA-based barcoding. DNA metabarcodi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Deepak Nanjappa, Stephane Audic, Sarah Romac, Wiebe H C F Kooistra, Adriana Zingone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4136930?pdf=render
id doaj-b490bbc8b26c4971b85de709ec65d02c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b490bbc8b26c4971b85de709ec65d02c2020-11-25T00:07:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0198e10381010.1371/journal.pone.0103810Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.Deepak NanjappaStephane AudicSarah RomacWiebe H C F KooistraAdriana ZingoneContinuous efforts to estimate actual diversity and to trace the species distribution and ranges in the natural environments have gone in equal pace with advancements of the technologies in the study of microbial species diversity from microscopic observations to DNA-based barcoding. DNA metabarcoding based on Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) constitutes the latest advancement in these efforts. Here we use NGS data from different sites to investigate the geographic range of six species of the diatom family Leptocylindraceae and to identify possible new taxa within the family.We analysed the V4 and V9 regions of the nuclear-encoded SSU rDNA gene region in the NGS database of the European ERA-Biodiversa project BioMarKs, collected in plankton and sediments at six coastal sites in European coastal waters, as well as environmental sequences from the NCBI database. All species known in the family Leptocylindraceae were detected in both datasets, but the much larger Illumina V9 dataset showed a higher species coverage at the various sites than the 454 V4 dataset. Sequences identical or similar to the references of Leptocylindrus aporus, L. convexus, L. danicus/hargravesii and Tenuicylindrus belgicus were found in the Mediterranean Sea, North Atlantic Ocean and Black Sea as well as at locations outside Europe. Instead, sequences identical or close to that of L. minimus were found in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Black Sea but not in the Mediterranean Sea, while sequences belonging to a yet undescribed taxon were encountered only in Oslo Fjord and Baffin Bay.Identification of Leptocylindraceae species in NGS datasets has expanded our knowledge of the species biogeographic distribution and of the overall diversity of this diatom family. Individual species appear to be widespread, but not all of them are found everywhere. Despite the sequencing depth allowed by NGS and the wide geographic area covered by this study, the diversity of this ancient diatom family appears to be low, at least at the level of the marker used in this study.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4136930?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Deepak Nanjappa
Stephane Audic
Sarah Romac
Wiebe H C F Kooistra
Adriana Zingone
spellingShingle Deepak Nanjappa
Stephane Audic
Sarah Romac
Wiebe H C F Kooistra
Adriana Zingone
Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Deepak Nanjappa
Stephane Audic
Sarah Romac
Wiebe H C F Kooistra
Adriana Zingone
author_sort Deepak Nanjappa
title Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.
title_short Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.
title_full Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.
title_fullStr Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a DNA metabarcoding approach.
title_sort assessment of species diversity and distribution of an ancient diatom lineage using a dna metabarcoding approach.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Continuous efforts to estimate actual diversity and to trace the species distribution and ranges in the natural environments have gone in equal pace with advancements of the technologies in the study of microbial species diversity from microscopic observations to DNA-based barcoding. DNA metabarcoding based on Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) constitutes the latest advancement in these efforts. Here we use NGS data from different sites to investigate the geographic range of six species of the diatom family Leptocylindraceae and to identify possible new taxa within the family.We analysed the V4 and V9 regions of the nuclear-encoded SSU rDNA gene region in the NGS database of the European ERA-Biodiversa project BioMarKs, collected in plankton and sediments at six coastal sites in European coastal waters, as well as environmental sequences from the NCBI database. All species known in the family Leptocylindraceae were detected in both datasets, but the much larger Illumina V9 dataset showed a higher species coverage at the various sites than the 454 V4 dataset. Sequences identical or similar to the references of Leptocylindrus aporus, L. convexus, L. danicus/hargravesii and Tenuicylindrus belgicus were found in the Mediterranean Sea, North Atlantic Ocean and Black Sea as well as at locations outside Europe. Instead, sequences identical or close to that of L. minimus were found in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Black Sea but not in the Mediterranean Sea, while sequences belonging to a yet undescribed taxon were encountered only in Oslo Fjord and Baffin Bay.Identification of Leptocylindraceae species in NGS datasets has expanded our knowledge of the species biogeographic distribution and of the overall diversity of this diatom family. Individual species appear to be widespread, but not all of them are found everywhere. Despite the sequencing depth allowed by NGS and the wide geographic area covered by this study, the diversity of this ancient diatom family appears to be low, at least at the level of the marker used in this study.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4136930?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT deepaknanjappa assessmentofspeciesdiversityanddistributionofanancientdiatomlineageusingadnametabarcodingapproach
AT stephaneaudic assessmentofspeciesdiversityanddistributionofanancientdiatomlineageusingadnametabarcodingapproach
AT sarahromac assessmentofspeciesdiversityanddistributionofanancientdiatomlineageusingadnametabarcodingapproach
AT wiebehcfkooistra assessmentofspeciesdiversityanddistributionofanancientdiatomlineageusingadnametabarcodingapproach
AT adrianazingone assessmentofspeciesdiversityanddistributionofanancientdiatomlineageusingadnametabarcodingapproach
_version_ 1725418013447946240