| Literature DB >> 18447908 |
Chester J Sands1, Peter Convey, Katrin Linse, Sandra J McInnes.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Meiofauna - multicellular animals captured between sieve size 45 mum and 1000 mum - are a fundamental component of terrestrial, and marine benthic ecosystems, forming an integral element of food webs, and playing a critical roll in nutrient recycling. Most phyla have meiofaunal representatives and studies of these taxa impact on a wide variety of sub-disciplines as well as having social and economic implications. However, studies of variation in meiofauna are presented with several important challenges. Isolating individuals from a sample substrate is a time consuming process, and identification requires increasingly scarce taxonomic expertise. Finding suitable morphological characters in many of these organisms is often difficult even for experts. Molecular markers are extremely useful for identifying variation in morphologically conserved organisms. However, for many species markers need to be developed de novo, while DNA can often only be extracted from pooled samples in order to obtain sufficient quantity and quality. Importantly, multiple independent markers are required to reconcile gene evolution with species evolution. In this primarily methodological paper we provide a proof of principle of a novel and effective protocol for the isolation of meiofauna from an environmental sample. We also go on to illustrate examples of the implications arising from subsequent screening for genetic variation at the level of the individual using ribosomal, mitochondrial and single copy nuclear markers.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18447908 PMCID: PMC2387140 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6785-8-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Primers used in each reaction combination
| Forward | Reverse | ||
| Amp 1 | SSU01_F | SSU82_R_short | |
| AACCTGGTTGATCCTGCCAGT | TGATCCTTCTGCAGGTTCACC | ||
| Amp 2 | |||
| Fragment 1 | SSU01_F | SSU26_R | |
| AACCTGGTTGATCCTGCCAGT | CATTCTTGGCAAATGCTTTCG | ||
| Fragment 2 | SSU22_F | SSU13_R | |
| TCCAAGGAAGGCAGCAGGC | GGGCATCACAGACCTGTTA | ||
| Fragment 3 | SSU26_F | SSU82_R | |
| CGAAAGCATTTGCCAAGAATG | TGATCCTTCTGCAGGTTCACCTAC | ||
| Amp 1 | LCO_1490 | mtD9_2206 | |
| GGTCAACAAATCATAAAGATATTGG | CCCGGTAAAATTAAAATATAAACTTC | ||
| Amp 2 | LCO_1490 | HCO_2198 | |
| GGTCAACAAATCATAAAGATATTGG | TAAACTTCAGGGTGACCAAAAAATCA | ||
| Amp 1 | Wg1s_F | Wg2n_R | |
| GARTGYAARTGYCAYGG | ACYTCRCARCACCARTG | ||
| Amp 2 | Wg1a_F | Wgs_R | |
| GARTGYAARTGYCAYGGYATGTCTGG | ACYTCRCARCACCARTGRAA | ||
| Amp 1 | Aspec11_F | Aspec15_R | |
| TGGATHMGNGARAARGA | AARTCRTCRAAYTTYTTYTG | ||
| Amp 2 | Aspec11_F | Aspec12_R | |
| TGGATHMGNGARAARGA | ACYTCNACYTTCCACCARTC | ||
| Amp 1 | 237_F | 1450_R | |
| CGGYCAYTTGATCTACAAATGC | TGTCRCGCACAGCGAAACKACC | ||
| Amp 2 | 277_F | 1221L_R | |
| ACSATYGAGAAGTTCGAGAAG | GGRTGRTTMARIACRATMACCTG | ||
Each sequence corresponds to one of two oligo-nucleotide primers used for each specific reaction. In addition, all forward primers were tailed with M13_REV (CAGGAAACAGCTATGACC) and all reverse primers were tailed with M13 – 21 (TGTAAAACGACGGCCAGT). Primers for 18S were adapted from [55]. LCO/HCO primers for CO1 were designed by [56]. mtD9 was designed by [57]. Wingless and Alpha Spectrin primers were sourced from [58]. Elongation Factor 1 alpha primers were designed from GenBank alignments of onychophora, tardigrade, drosophila and artemia.
Figure 1Tardigrade phylogeny constructed from 18S rRNA. Phylogeny produced using maximum likelihood analyses under a GTR+I+Γ model using 884 bases of 18S rRNA. Numbers at nodes are support values generated from 1000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates. Terminal labels associated with unique numbers were identified as: Macro 001–008 – Macrobiotus furciger, Macro 048-52,68-077 – Macrobiotus sp. (hufelandi type), Dacty – Dactylobiotus sp., Acut – Acutuncus antarcticus, Diph – Diphascon sp., RamO – Ramazzottius oberhaeuseri, Isohyp – Isohypsibius asper, MilnT – Milnesium tardigradum, MilnC – Milnesium sp. "charcot", Bryod – Bryodelphax sp., EchinC – Echiniscus sp., EchinT – Echiniscus testudo.
Figure 2Tardigrade phylogeny constructed from CO1 and Wingless. Phylogenies produced using maximum likelihood analyses under GTR+I+Γ models using: A. 534 bases of mitochondrial CO1 and B. 321 bases of Wingless. Terminal labels correspond to those described in Figure 1. Support at nodes was generated using 1000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates.