| Literature DB >> 25171185 |
Mauricio Ramírez-Castrillón1, Sandra Denise Camargo Mendes2, Mario Inostroza-Ponta3, Patricia Valente4.
Abstract
In microbiology, identification of all isolates by sequencing is still unfeasible in small research laboratories. Therefore, many yeast diversity studies follow a screening procedure consisting of clustering the yeast isolates using MSP-PCR fingerprinting, followed by identification of one or a few selected representatives of each cluster by sequencing. Although this procedure has been widely applied in the literature, it has not been properly validated. We evaluated a standardized protocol using MSP-PCR fingerprinting with the primers (GTG)5 and M13 for the discrimination of wine associated yeasts in South Brazil. Two datasets were used: yeasts isolated from bottled wines and vineyard environments. We compared the discriminatory power of both primers in a subset of 16 strains, choosing the primer (GTG)5 for further evaluation. Afterwards, we applied this technique to 245 strains, and compared the results with the identification obtained by partial sequencing of the LSU rRNA gene, considered as the gold standard. An array matrix was constructed for each dataset and used as input for clustering with two methods (hierarchical dendrograms and QAPGrid layout). For both yeast datasets, unrelated species were clustered in the same group. The sensitivity score of (GTG)5 MSP-PCR fingerprinting was high, but specificity was low. As a conclusion, the yeast diversity inferred in several previous studies may have been underestimated and some isolates were probably misidentified due to the compliance to this screening procedure.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25171185 PMCID: PMC4149466 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0105870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Yeasts species from bottled wines sampled in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina, South Brazil.
| Species | Number of strains | Strain code |
|
| 36 | MRC188, MRC163, MRC143, MRC130, MRC142, MRC140, MRC139, MRC141, MRC128, MRC124, MRC106B, MRC133, MRC189, MRC109, MRC110, MRC112, MRC122, MRC123, MRC125, MRC107, MRC114, MRC115, MRC116B, MRC127, MRC136, MRC111, MRC132, MRC113, MRC134, MRC116A, MRC171, MRC185, MRC126, MRC186, MRC121, MRC131 |
|
| 30 | MRC178, MRC180, MRC177, MRC88, MRC172, MRC181, MRC117, MRC120, 66E, 67E, 75E, 59E, 60E, 62E, 65E, 68E, 69E, 70E, MRC80, 73E, 77E, 74E, MRC190, MRC78, MRC79, MRC86, MRC87, MRC182, 22E, 71E |
|
| 14 | MRC162, MRC161, MRC137, MRC160, MRC187, MRC144, MRC145, MRC156, MRC105, MRC118, MRC119, MRC146, MRC173, 24E |
|
| 8 | MRC152A, MRC153, 16E, MRC184, MRC165, MRC152B, MRC166, MRC168, |
|
| 7 | MRC154, 26E, 72E, 20E, 15E, MRC164, 19E |
|
| 2 | MRC183, 17E |
|
| 1 | MRC148 |
|
| 1 | MRC179 |
|
| 1 | 18E |
|
| 1 | MRC158 |
|
| 1 | MRC81 |
| Non identified | 4 | MRC129, MRC147, 23E, 25E |
|
| 106 |
* These species were assessed for clustering analysis.
**We considered these species as not identified.
Specificity, sensitivity and kappa index of MSP-PCR fingerprinting using the primer (GTG)5 in comparison with rDNA sequencing as the gold standard for the two datasets (“lower diversity” and “higher diversity”), using two ranges of band sizes: 200–3500bp or 200–900 bp.
| Dataset | Range of band size | MSP-PCR fingerprinting | Gold standard (sequencing) | Kappa index | |
| (GTG5) | |||||
| “Lower diversity” | 200–3500bp | Specificity | 23.30% | 100.00% | 0.177 |
| Sensitivity | 100.00% | 41.70% | |||
| 200–900bp | Specificity | 15.20% | 100.00% | 0.169 | |
| Sensitivity | 100.00% | 60.30% | |||
| “Higher diversity” | 200–3500bp | Specificity | 33.70% | 97.10% | 0.201 |
| Sensitivity | 97.40% | 35.60% | |||
| 200–900bp | Specificity | 20.20% | 95.50% | 0.124 | |
| Sensitivity | 97.70% | 36.40% |
Figure 1Dendrograms of the clustering of the strains from the "lower diversity" dataset by Hierarchical Clustering using: (a) average linkage (b) complete linkage, (c) single linkage, and (d) Ward´s method.
The distance was computed using the Euclidean distance between the genetic profiles based on the MSP-PCR fingerprinting with the primer GTG5.