| Literature DB >> 27652127 |
Ankush Ashok Saddhe1, Rahul Arvind Jamdade2, Kundan Kumar1.
Abstract
Mangroves are salt-tolerant forest ecosystems of tropical and subtropical intertidal regions. They are among most productive, diverse, biologically important ecosystem and inclined toward threatened system. Identification of mangrove species is of critical importance in conserving and utilizing biodiversity, which apparently hindered by a lack of taxonomic expertise. In recent years, DNA barcoding using plastid markers rbcL and matK has been suggested as an effective method to enrich traditional taxonomic expertise for rapid species identification and biodiversity inventories. In the present study, we performed assessment of available 14 mangrove species of Goa, west coast India based on core DNA barcode markers, rbcL and matK. PCR amplification success rate, intra- and inter-specific genetic distance variation and the correct identification percentage were taken into account to assess candidate barcode regions. PCR and sequence success rate were high in rbcL (97.7 %) and matK (95.5 %) region. The two candidate chloroplast barcoding regions (rbcL, matK) yielded barcode gaps. Our results clearly demonstrated that matK locus assigned highest correct identification rates (72.09 %) based on TaxonDNA Best Match criteria. The concatenated rbcL + matK loci were able to adequately discriminate all mangrove genera and species to some extent except those in Rhizophora, Sonneratia and Avicennia. Our study provides the first endorsement of the species resolution among mangroves using plastid genes with few exceptions. Our future work will be focused on evaluation of other barcode markers to delineate complete resolution of mangrove species and identification of putative hybrids.Entities:
Keywords: DNA barcode; Goa; Mangrove; matK; rbcL
Year: 2016 PMID: 27652127 PMCID: PMC5021661 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-3191-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Details of the mangrove species used in the present study with family, status, life form, voucher number and GenBank accession numbers obtained after sequence submission
| S. No. | Specimen | Family | Status | Life form | Herbarium Voucher No. | Accession No. | Accession No. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Acanthaceae | TM | Tree | AAS-100-02 | KP697351, KP697352, KU748517 | KP725238, KP725239 |
| 2 |
| Acanthaceae | TM | Tree | AAS-110-12 | KP697349, KP697350, KM255068 | KP725236, KM255083, KP725237 |
| 3 |
| Acanthaceae | TM | Tree | AAS-120-22 | KM255067, KM255069, KP697348 | KM255082, KM255084, KP725235 |
| 4 |
| Rhizophoraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-130-32 | KP697354, KM255070, KP697353 | KP725241, KM255085, KP725240 |
| 5 |
| Rhizophoraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-140-42 | KM255071,KP697355,KP697356 | KM255086,KP725242,KP725243 |
| 6 |
| Rhizophoraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-150-52 | KM255077, KU748519 | KM255092, KU748522, KU748523 |
| 7 |
| Rhizophoraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-160-62 | KP697362, KP697363, KM255076 | KP725249, KP725250, KM255091 |
| 8 |
| Primulaceae | MMT | Tree/Shrub | AAS-170-72 | KM255066, KP697344, KP697345, KM255075, KP697346, KP697347 | KM255081, KP725231, KP725232, KM255090, KP725233, KP725234 |
| 9 |
| Euphorbiaceae | TM | Tree | AAS-180-82 | KM255073, KP697360, KP697359 | KM255088, KP725247, KP725246 |
| 10 |
| Rhizophoraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-190-92 | KP697361, KM255074, KU748518 | KP725248, KM255089, KU748521 |
| 11 |
| Rhizophoraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-200-02 | KM255072, KP697358, KP697357 | KM255087, KP725244, KP725245 |
| 12 |
| Lythraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-210-12 | KM255078, KP697364, KU748520 | KM255093, KP725251 |
| 13 |
| Lythraceae | TM | Tree | AAS-220-22 | KP697365, KP697366, KM255079 | KP725252, KP725253, KM255094 |
| 14 |
| Acanthaceae | TM | Shrub | AAS-230-32 | KM255065, KP697342, KP697343 | KM255080, KP725229, KP725230 |
TM True Mangroves, MM Minor Mangroves, T Tomlinson (1986)
Genetic divergence of mangrove species based on Kimura 2 Parameter within species, genus and family levels
| No. of sequences | Taxa | Comparisons | Min Dist (%) | Mean Dist (%) | Max Dist (%) | SE Dist (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| For | |||||||
| Within species | 44 | 14 | 53 | 0 | 0.24 | 0.68 | 0 |
| Within genus | 26 | 4 | 50 | 0 | 0.35 | 0.68 | 0 |
| Within family | 29 | 2 | 132 | 1.71 | 2.63 | 4.01 | 0 |
| For | |||||||
| Within species | 43 | 14 | 50 | 0 | 0.2 | 1.32 | 0.01 |
| Within genus | 25 | 4 | 45 | 0 | 0.9 | 2.32 | 0.02 |
| Within family | 29 | 2 | 141 | 2.11 | 5.82 | 13.37 | 0.02 |
Min Dist Minimum distance, Max Dist Maximum distance, SE Dist Standard error distance
Fig. 1Scatterplots confirming the existence and magnitude of the barcode gap. a For rbcL mean intra-specific versus Nearest Neighbor (NN). b For rbcL individuals per species vs. max intra-specific. c For matK mean intra-specific versus Nearest Neighbour. d For matK individuals per species versus max intra-specific
Identification success rates using TaxonDNA (Species Identifier) program under ‘Best Match’ and ‘Best Closest Match’ methods
| Barcodes | No. of Sequences | Best Match (%) | Best closest match (%) | T (%) | No. of clusters | Match/mismatch | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Correct | Ambiguous | Incorrect | Correct | Ambiguous | Incorrect | No match | |||||
|
| 44 | 47.72 | 36.36 | 15.9 | 31.81 | 27.27 | 11.36 | 13 | 0 | 23 | 6/8 |
|
| 43 | 72.09 | 25.58 | 2.32 | 39.53 | 13.95 | 2.32 | 44.18 | 0.11 | 24 | 10/4 |
|
| 42 | 66.66 | 16.66 | 16.66 | 66.66 | 16.66 | 16.66 | 0 | 0.2 | 21 | 8/6 |
TaxonDNA is an alignment-based method based on sequence distance matrices. Percentage of correct/incorrect/ambiguous assignment of a taxon is compared using molecular operating taxonomic unit (MOTU). The species specific clustering using match and mismatch criteria
T Threshold
Identifications of all mangrove samples based on BLASTClust result
| Barcode | No. of sequences | Average length of sequences | Number of species | Number of clusters | Match/mismatch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 44 | 586 | 14 | 6 | 3/11 |
|
| 43 | 818 | 14 | 8 | 3/11 |
|
| 42 | 1404 | 14 | 15 | 4/10 |
BLASTClust is a method based on blast similarity scores of unaligned sequences
Fig. 2Neighbor joining tree (Kimura 2 Parameter distance using bootstrap value of 1000 replicates). a rbcL, b matK, and c rbcL + matK concatenated NJ (K2P) trees. Highlighted clades (red color) indicate unresolved or least differentiated mangroves sequences
Identification achieved by phylogenetic analysis using Neighbor Joining (NJ) and various methods, obtained from models test
| Barcodes | Match/mismatch (NJ method) | Match/mismatch (Model test method) |
|---|---|---|
|
| 6/(8) | 6/8 (K2 + G) |
|
| 8/(6) | 8/6 (GTR + I) |
|
| 8/(6) | 8/6 (T92 + I) |
For each, Bootstrap replicates = 1000
K2 + G Kimura 2 + Gamma distribution, GTR + I Generalised time reversible + proportion of invariable sites (I), T92 + I Tamura 1992 Model + proportion of invariable sites (I)