TY - JOUR
T1 - Multiplex sequencing of pooled mitochondrial genomes - A crucial step toward biodiversity analysis using mito-metagenomics
AU - Tang, Min
AU - Tan, Meihua
AU - Meng, Guanliang
AU - Yang, Shenzhou
AU - Su, Xu
AU - Liu, Shanlin
AU - Song, Wenhui
AU - Li, Yiyuan
AU - Wu, Qiong
AU - Zhang, Aibing
AU - Zhou, Xin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
PY - 2014/12/16
Y1 - 2014/12/16
N2 - The advent in high-throughput-sequencing (HTS) technologies has revolutionized conventional biodiversity research by enabling parallel capture of DNA sequences possessing species-level diagnosis. However, polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based implementation is biased by the efficiency of primer binding across lineages of organisms. A PCR-free HTS approach will alleviate this artefact and significantly improve upon the multi-locus method utilizing full mitogenomes. Here we developed a novel multiplex sequencing and assembly pipeline allowing for simultaneous acquisition of full mitogenomes from pooled animals without DNA enrichment or amplification. By concatenating assemblies from three de novo assemblers, we obtained high-quality mitogenomes for all 49 pooled taxa, with 36 species >15 kb and the remaining >10 kb, including 20 complete mitogenomes and nearly all protein coding genes (99.6%). The assembly quality was carefully validated with Sanger sequences, reference genomes and conservativeness of protein coding genes across taxa. The new method was effective even for closely related taxa, e.g. three Drosophila spp., demonstrating its broad utility for biodiversity research and mito-phylogenomics. Finally, the in silicosimulation showed that by recruiting multiple mito-loci, taxon detection was improved at a fixed sequencing depth. Combined, these results demonstrate the plausibility of a multi-locus mito-metagenomics approach as the next phase of the current single-locus metabarcoding method.
AB - The advent in high-throughput-sequencing (HTS) technologies has revolutionized conventional biodiversity research by enabling parallel capture of DNA sequences possessing species-level diagnosis. However, polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based implementation is biased by the efficiency of primer binding across lineages of organisms. A PCR-free HTS approach will alleviate this artefact and significantly improve upon the multi-locus method utilizing full mitogenomes. Here we developed a novel multiplex sequencing and assembly pipeline allowing for simultaneous acquisition of full mitogenomes from pooled animals without DNA enrichment or amplification. By concatenating assemblies from three de novo assemblers, we obtained high-quality mitogenomes for all 49 pooled taxa, with 36 species >15 kb and the remaining >10 kb, including 20 complete mitogenomes and nearly all protein coding genes (99.6%). The assembly quality was carefully validated with Sanger sequences, reference genomes and conservativeness of protein coding genes across taxa. The new method was effective even for closely related taxa, e.g. three Drosophila spp., demonstrating its broad utility for biodiversity research and mito-phylogenomics. Finally, the in silicosimulation showed that by recruiting multiple mito-loci, taxon detection was improved at a fixed sequencing depth. Combined, these results demonstrate the plausibility of a multi-locus mito-metagenomics approach as the next phase of the current single-locus metabarcoding method.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84927611164&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/nar/gku917
DO - 10.1093/nar/gku917
M3 - Article
C2 - 25294837
AN - SCOPUS:84927611164
SN - 0305-1048
VL - 42
JO - Nucleic Acids Research
JF - Nucleic Acids Research
IS - 22
M1 - e166
ER -