| Literature DB >> 33179423 |
Mads Reinholdt Jensen1, Eva Egelyng Sigsgaard1, Shenglin Liu1, Andrea Manica2, Steffen Sanvig Bach3, Michael Møller Hansen1, Peter Rask Møller4, Philip Francis Thomsen1.
Abstract
Environmental DNA (eDNA) provides a promising supplement to traditional sampling methods for population genetic inferences, but current studies have almost entirely focused on short mitochondrial markers. Here, we develop one mitochondrial and one nuclear set of target capture probes for the whale shark (Rhincodon typus) and test them on seawater samples collected in Qatar to investigate the potential of target capture for eDNA-based population studies. The mitochondrial target capture successfully retrieved ~235× (90× - 352× per base position) coverage of the whale shark mitogenome. Using a minor allele frequency of 5%, we find 29 variable sites throughout the mitogenome, indicative of at least five contributing individuals. We also retrieved numerous mitochondrial reads from an abundant nontarget species, mackerel tuna (Euthynnus affinis), showing a clear relationship between sequence similarity to the capture probes and the number of captured reads. The nuclear target capture probes retrieved only a few reads and polymorphic variants from the whale shark, but we successfully obtained millions of reads and thousands of polymorphic variants with different allele frequencies from E. affinis. We demonstrate that target capture of complete mitochondrial genomes and thousands of nuclear loci is possible from aquatic eDNA samples. Our results highlight that careful probe design, taking into account the range of divergence between target and nontarget sequences as well as presence of nontarget species at the sampling site, is crucial to consider. eDNA sampling coupled with target capture approaches provide an efficient means with which to retrieve population genomic data from aggregating and spawning aquatic species.Entities:
Keywords: cross-capture; environmental DNA; mitogenome; nuclear DNA; population genomics; target capture
Year: 2020 PMID: 33179423 DOI: 10.1111/1755-0998.13293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol Resour ISSN: 1755-098X Impact factor: 7.090