New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones. / Moorhouse-Gann, Rosemary J.; Dunn, Jenny C.; de Vere, Natasha; Goder, Martine; Cole, Nik; Hipperson, Helen; Symondson, William O. C.

In: Scientific Reports, Vol. 8, 8542, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Moorhouse-Gann, RJ, Dunn, JC, de Vere, N, Goder, M, Cole, N, Hipperson, H & Symondson, WOC 2018, 'New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones', Scientific Reports, vol. 8, 8542. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-26648-2

APA

Moorhouse-Gann, R. J., Dunn, J. C., de Vere, N., Goder, M., Cole, N., Hipperson, H., & Symondson, W. O. C. (2018). New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones. Scientific Reports, 8, [8542]. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-26648-2

Vancouver

Moorhouse-Gann RJ, Dunn JC, de Vere N, Goder M, Cole N, Hipperson H et al. New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones. Scientific Reports. 2018;8. 8542. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-26648-2

Author

Moorhouse-Gann, Rosemary J. ; Dunn, Jenny C. ; de Vere, Natasha ; Goder, Martine ; Cole, Nik ; Hipperson, Helen ; Symondson, William O. C. / New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones. In: Scientific Reports. 2018 ; Vol. 8.

Bibtex

@article{357a4b39adac4313aa733a835614ae28,
title = "New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones",
abstract = "DNA metabarcoding is a rapidly growing technique for obtaining detailed dietary information. Current metabarcoding methods for herbivory, using a single locus, can lack taxonomic resolution for some applications. We present novel primers for the second internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA (ITS2) designed for dietary studies in Mauritius and the UK, which have the potential to give unrivalled taxonomic coverage and resolution from a short-amplicon barcode. In silico testing used three databases of plant ITS2 sequences from UK and Mauritian floras (native and introduced) totalling 6561 sequences from 1790 species across 174 families. Our primers were well-matched in silico to 88% of species, providing taxonomic resolution of 86.1%, 99.4% and 99.9% at the species, genus and family levels, respectively. In vitro, the primers amplified 99% of Mauritian (n = 169) and 100% of UK (n = 33) species, and co-amplified multiple plant species from degraded faecal DNA from reptiles and birds in two case studies. For the ITS2 region, we advocate taxonomic assignment based on best sequence match instead of a clustering approach. With short amplicons of 187–387 bp, these primers are suitable for metabarcoding plant DNA from faecal samples, across a broad geographic range, whilst delivering unparalleled taxonomic resolution.",
author = "Moorhouse-Gann, {Rosemary J.} and Dunn, {Jenny C.} and {de Vere}, Natasha and Martine Goder and Nik Cole and Helen Hipperson and Symondson, {William O. C.}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1038/s41598-018-26648-2",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Scientific Reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - New universal ITS2 primers for high-resolution herbivory analyses using DNA metabarcoding in both tropical and temperate zones

AU - Moorhouse-Gann, Rosemary J.

AU - Dunn, Jenny C.

AU - de Vere, Natasha

AU - Goder, Martine

AU - Cole, Nik

AU - Hipperson, Helen

AU - Symondson, William O. C.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - DNA metabarcoding is a rapidly growing technique for obtaining detailed dietary information. Current metabarcoding methods for herbivory, using a single locus, can lack taxonomic resolution for some applications. We present novel primers for the second internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA (ITS2) designed for dietary studies in Mauritius and the UK, which have the potential to give unrivalled taxonomic coverage and resolution from a short-amplicon barcode. In silico testing used three databases of plant ITS2 sequences from UK and Mauritian floras (native and introduced) totalling 6561 sequences from 1790 species across 174 families. Our primers were well-matched in silico to 88% of species, providing taxonomic resolution of 86.1%, 99.4% and 99.9% at the species, genus and family levels, respectively. In vitro, the primers amplified 99% of Mauritian (n = 169) and 100% of UK (n = 33) species, and co-amplified multiple plant species from degraded faecal DNA from reptiles and birds in two case studies. For the ITS2 region, we advocate taxonomic assignment based on best sequence match instead of a clustering approach. With short amplicons of 187–387 bp, these primers are suitable for metabarcoding plant DNA from faecal samples, across a broad geographic range, whilst delivering unparalleled taxonomic resolution.

AB - DNA metabarcoding is a rapidly growing technique for obtaining detailed dietary information. Current metabarcoding methods for herbivory, using a single locus, can lack taxonomic resolution for some applications. We present novel primers for the second internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA (ITS2) designed for dietary studies in Mauritius and the UK, which have the potential to give unrivalled taxonomic coverage and resolution from a short-amplicon barcode. In silico testing used three databases of plant ITS2 sequences from UK and Mauritian floras (native and introduced) totalling 6561 sequences from 1790 species across 174 families. Our primers were well-matched in silico to 88% of species, providing taxonomic resolution of 86.1%, 99.4% and 99.9% at the species, genus and family levels, respectively. In vitro, the primers amplified 99% of Mauritian (n = 169) and 100% of UK (n = 33) species, and co-amplified multiple plant species from degraded faecal DNA from reptiles and birds in two case studies. For the ITS2 region, we advocate taxonomic assignment based on best sequence match instead of a clustering approach. With short amplicons of 187–387 bp, these primers are suitable for metabarcoding plant DNA from faecal samples, across a broad geographic range, whilst delivering unparalleled taxonomic resolution.

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-018-26648-2

DO - 10.1038/s41598-018-26648-2

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

M1 - 8542

ER -

ID: 284973310