High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities

Summary: Concerns regarding the rapid loss of endemic biodiversity, and introduction and spread of non-indigenous species, have focused attention on the need and ability to detect species present in communities at low abundance. However, detection of rare species poses immense technical challenges,...

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Autores principales: Zhan, A., Hulák, M., Sylvester, F., Huang, X., Adebayo, A.A., Abbott, C.L., Adamowicz, S.J., Heath, D.D., Cristescu, M.E., Macisaac, H.J.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_2041210X_v4_n6_p558_Zhan
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spelling todo:paper_2041210X_v4_n6_p558_Zhan2023-10-03T16:37:54Z High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities Zhan, A. Hulák, M. Sylvester, F. Huang, X. Adebayo, A.A. Abbott, C.L. Adamowicz, S.J. Heath, D.D. Cristescu, M.E. Macisaac, H.J. Alien invasive species Biodiversity Endangered species Next-generation sequencing (NGS) Non-indigenous species nSSU rDNA Plankton Universal primers algae Animalia Chlorophyta Fungi Protista Summary: Concerns regarding the rapid loss of endemic biodiversity, and introduction and spread of non-indigenous species, have focused attention on the need and ability to detect species present in communities at low abundance. However, detection of rare species poses immense technical challenges, especially for morphologically cryptic species, microscopic taxa and those beneath the water surface in aquatic ecosystems. Next-generation sequencing technology provides a robust tool to assess biodiversity, especially for detection of rare species. Here, we assess the sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species using known indicator species spiked into existing complex plankton samples. In addition, we develop universal small subunit ribosomal DNA primers for amplification of a wide range of taxa for detailed description of biodiversity in complex communities. A universality test of newly designed primers for the hypervariable V4 region of the nuclear small subunit ribosomal DNA (V4-nSSU) using a plankton sample collected from Hamilton Harbor showed that 454 pyrosequencing based on this universal primer pair can recover a wide range of taxa, including animals, plants (algae), fungi, blue-green algae and protists. A sensitivity test showed that 454 pyrosequencing based on newly designed universal V4-nSSU primers was extremely sensitive for detection of very rare species. Pyrosequencing was able to recover spiked indicator species with biomass percentage as low as approximately 2·3 × 10-5% when 24 artificially assembled samples were tagged and sequenced in one PicoTiter plate (i.e. sequencing depth of an equivalent of 1/24 PicoTiter plate). In addition, spiked rare species were sometimes recovered as singletons (i.e. Operational Taxonomic Units represented by a single sequence), suggesting that at least some singletons are informative for recovering unique lineages in 'rare biospheres'. The method established here allows biologists to better investigate the composition of aquatic communities, especially for detection of rare taxa. Despite a small-scale pyrosequencing effort, we demonstrate the extreme sensitivity of pyrosequencing using rare species spiked into plankton samples. We propose that the method is a powerful tool for detection of rare native and/or alien species. © 2013 British Ecological Society. Fil:Sylvester, F. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_2041210X_v4_n6_p558_Zhan
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Alien invasive species
Biodiversity
Endangered species
Next-generation sequencing (NGS)
Non-indigenous species
nSSU rDNA
Plankton
Universal primers
algae
Animalia
Chlorophyta
Fungi
Protista
spellingShingle Alien invasive species
Biodiversity
Endangered species
Next-generation sequencing (NGS)
Non-indigenous species
nSSU rDNA
Plankton
Universal primers
algae
Animalia
Chlorophyta
Fungi
Protista
Zhan, A.
Hulák, M.
Sylvester, F.
Huang, X.
Adebayo, A.A.
Abbott, C.L.
Adamowicz, S.J.
Heath, D.D.
Cristescu, M.E.
Macisaac, H.J.
High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
topic_facet Alien invasive species
Biodiversity
Endangered species
Next-generation sequencing (NGS)
Non-indigenous species
nSSU rDNA
Plankton
Universal primers
algae
Animalia
Chlorophyta
Fungi
Protista
description Summary: Concerns regarding the rapid loss of endemic biodiversity, and introduction and spread of non-indigenous species, have focused attention on the need and ability to detect species present in communities at low abundance. However, detection of rare species poses immense technical challenges, especially for morphologically cryptic species, microscopic taxa and those beneath the water surface in aquatic ecosystems. Next-generation sequencing technology provides a robust tool to assess biodiversity, especially for detection of rare species. Here, we assess the sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species using known indicator species spiked into existing complex plankton samples. In addition, we develop universal small subunit ribosomal DNA primers for amplification of a wide range of taxa for detailed description of biodiversity in complex communities. A universality test of newly designed primers for the hypervariable V4 region of the nuclear small subunit ribosomal DNA (V4-nSSU) using a plankton sample collected from Hamilton Harbor showed that 454 pyrosequencing based on this universal primer pair can recover a wide range of taxa, including animals, plants (algae), fungi, blue-green algae and protists. A sensitivity test showed that 454 pyrosequencing based on newly designed universal V4-nSSU primers was extremely sensitive for detection of very rare species. Pyrosequencing was able to recover spiked indicator species with biomass percentage as low as approximately 2·3 × 10-5% when 24 artificially assembled samples were tagged and sequenced in one PicoTiter plate (i.e. sequencing depth of an equivalent of 1/24 PicoTiter plate). In addition, spiked rare species were sometimes recovered as singletons (i.e. Operational Taxonomic Units represented by a single sequence), suggesting that at least some singletons are informative for recovering unique lineages in 'rare biospheres'. The method established here allows biologists to better investigate the composition of aquatic communities, especially for detection of rare taxa. Despite a small-scale pyrosequencing effort, we demonstrate the extreme sensitivity of pyrosequencing using rare species spiked into plankton samples. We propose that the method is a powerful tool for detection of rare native and/or alien species. © 2013 British Ecological Society.
format JOUR
author Zhan, A.
Hulák, M.
Sylvester, F.
Huang, X.
Adebayo, A.A.
Abbott, C.L.
Adamowicz, S.J.
Heath, D.D.
Cristescu, M.E.
Macisaac, H.J.
author_facet Zhan, A.
Hulák, M.
Sylvester, F.
Huang, X.
Adebayo, A.A.
Abbott, C.L.
Adamowicz, S.J.
Heath, D.D.
Cristescu, M.E.
Macisaac, H.J.
author_sort Zhan, A.
title High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
title_short High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
title_full High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
title_fullStr High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
title_full_unstemmed High sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
title_sort high sensitivity of 454 pyrosequencing for detection of rare species in aquatic communities
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_2041210X_v4_n6_p558_Zhan
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