Assembly-free reads accurate identification (AFRAID) approach outperforms other methods of DNA barcoding in the walnut family (Juglandaceae).

IF 4.6 1区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES
Plant Diversity Pub Date : 2024-10-16 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.pld.2024.10.002
Yanlei Liu, Kai Chen, Lihu Wang, Xinqiang Yu, Chao Xu, Zhili Suo, Shiliang Zhou, Shuo Shi, Wenpan Dong
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

DNA barcoding has been extensively used for species identification. However, species identification of mixed samples or degraded DNA is limited by current DNA barcoding methods. In this study, we use plant species in Juglandaceae to evaluate an assembly-free reads accurate identification (AFRAID) method of species identification, a novel approach for precise species identification in plants. Specifically, we determined (1) the accuracy of DNA barcoding approaches in delimiting species in Juglandaceae, (2) the minimum size of chloroplast dataset for species discrimination, and (3) minimum amount of next generation sequencing (NGS) data required for species identification. We found that species identification rates were highest when whole chloroplast genomes were used, followed by taxon-specific DNA barcodes, and then universal DNA barcodes. Species identification of 100% was achieved when chloroplast genome sequence coverage reached 20% and the original sequencing data reached 500,000 reads. AFRAID accurately identified species for all samples tested after 500,000 clean reads, with far less computing time than common approaches. These results provide a new approach to accurately identify species, overcoming limitations of traditional DNA barcodes. Our method, which uses next generation sequencing to generate partial chloroplast genomes, reveals that DNA barcode regions are not necessarily fixed, accelerating the process of species identification.

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来源期刊
Plant Diversity
Plant Diversity Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1863
审稿时长
35 days
期刊介绍: Plant Diversity (formerly Plant Diversity and Resources) is an international plant science journal that publishes substantial original research and review papers that advance our understanding of the past and current distribution of plants, contribute to the development of more phylogenetically accurate taxonomic classifications, present new findings on or insights into evolutionary processes and mechanisms that are of interest to the community of plant systematic and evolutionary biologists. While the focus of the journal is on biodiversity, ecology and evolution of East Asian flora, it is not limited to these topics. Applied evolutionary issues, such as climate change and conservation biology, are welcome, especially if they address conceptual problems. Theoretical papers are equally welcome. Preference is given to concise, clearly written papers focusing on precisely framed questions or hypotheses. Papers that are purely descriptive have a low chance of acceptance. Fields covered by the journal include: plant systematics and taxonomy- evolutionary developmental biology- reproductive biology- phylo- and biogeography- evolutionary ecology- population biology- conservation biology- palaeobotany- molecular evolution- comparative and evolutionary genomics- physiology- biochemistry
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