| Literature DB >> 35059459 |
Sarfraz Ahmed1, Muhammad Ibrahim2, Chanin Nantasenamat3, Muhammad Farrukh Nisar4, Aijaz Ahmad Malik3, Rashem Waheed2, Muhammad Z Ahmed5, Suvash Chandra Ojha6, Mohammad Khursheed Alam7,8.
Abstract
DNA barcodes are regarded as hereditary succession codes that serve as a recognition marker to address several queries relating to the identification, classification, community ecology, and evolution of certain functional traits in organisms. The mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase 1 (CO1) gene as a DNA barcode is highly efficient for discriminating vertebrate and invertebrate animal species. Similarly, different specific markers are used for other organisms, including ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (rbcL), maturase kinase (matK), transfer RNA-H and photosystem II D1-ApbsArabidopsis thaliana (trnH-psbA), and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) for plant species; 16S ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA), elongation factor Tu gene (Tuf gene), and chaperonin for bacterial strains; and nuclear ITS for fungal strains. Nevertheless, the taxon coverage of reference sequences is far from complete for genus or species-level identification. Applying the next-generation sequencing approach to the parallel acquisition of DNA barcode sequences could greatly expand the potential for library preparation or accurate identification in biodiversity research. Overall, this review articulates on the DNA barcoding technology as applied to different organisms, its universality, applicability, and innovative approach to handling DNA-based species identification.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35059459 PMCID: PMC8766189 DOI: 10.1155/2022/1846485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
List of different software/databases being used for DNA barcoding.
| Organism | Software/databases | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Marine life | Genbank ( | Genbank data enable molecular diagnostic application on thousands of fish DNA sequences. |
| FISH-Bol ( | Stores DNA barcodes of all fishes and provides a powerful tool to enhance the interaction of fish species. FISH-Bol is a robust tool that contains short regions of DNA as barcodes, images, and geospatial coordinates of voucher specimens. | |
| Mammals | MammaliaBOL ( | A comprehensive reference library of DNA barcodes for the global mammal fauna |
| Insects | Korea Barcode of life (KBOL) ( | Stores barcode data of vertebrates, invertebrates, land tracheophytes, and lower plants |
| Amphibians and reptiles | G-BOL, German Consortium for the Barcode of Life: ( | Stores COI barcoding fragment for 2000 specimens of Germany. This covers about 60% of the spider fauna and more than 70% of the harvestmen fauna recorded for Germany. |
| BFB, Barcoding Fauna Bavarica: ( | Barcodes the entire fauna (and also other life) of the German state Bavaria and stores barcoding data over 11,000 of animal species | |
| Animals | Consortium for the Barcode of life (CBOL) ( | CBOL is a barcoding database around the world and manages reference sequences for almost all animal life. |
| IBOL ( | Recently, the barcode of life project introduced a new phase with a launch of the international barcode of life (IBOL) for identification of animals. | |
| Plants | Quarantine Barcode of Life (QBOL)( | DNA barcode database was developed to identify quarantine organism in support of plant health. |
| Tree-Bol | Compilation of barcoding data of tree species led by New York Botanical Garden | |
| Grass-Bol | Compilation of barcoding data of grasses under the supervision of Adelaide University and University of British Columbia | |
| Fungi | CBOL ( | Develops standard protocol and constructs a comprehensive DNA barcode library |
| Assembling the fungal Tree of life (AFTOL) ( | Provides insight on fungi evolution | |
| Canadian Centre for DNA barcoding (CCDB) ( | Offers access to species identification | |
| ITS database | Identifies sequences of Ectomycorrhizal and Basidiomycetes | |
| Mycobank ( | Online database that documents new mycological names and combinations | |
| European Consortium for the Barcode of Life (ECBOL) ( | ECBOL functions as an information and coordination hub for taxonomists in Europe. | |
| Bacteria | BOLD ( | Registers reference barcode sequences to apply high-throughput DNA barcoding to genus or species level identification in biodiversity research |
| Bio Barcode ( | Allows biological specimen DNA sequence data to meet international standards by providing specialized services | |
| QBOL ( | Acquires DNA barcode data of important species of bacteria and other organisms to build an analytical tool for quarantine |
Figure 1Tree of Life with some of discovered primary and secondary code barcodes. DNA barcoding in conjunction with morphological, ecological, and biochemical information reveals an intriguing diversity of species in discovering and describing new species for fern, algae, fungi, bacteria, viruses, arthropodes, nematodes, mollusks fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, higher plants, and mammals.
Figure 2Barcoding reliability in different organism on the basis of percentage identification. Marine life depicts almost 80%, insects 94%, protists 25%, plants 70%, fungal life 56%, and bacterial species 51% reliable tool. The reliability of such procedure depends on an effective distinction between intra and interspecific variations, which is missing for several of the taxa studied for humans, as indicated by significant juxtaposition of sequences.
Figure 3DNA barcoding in plants using different barcoding regions as a genetic marker.
Different barcode regions in the studied plants.
| Plant barcode | References |
|---|---|
| nrITS | [ |
| nrITS2 | [ |
| matK | [ |
| rpoB | [ |
| rpoC1 | [ |
| psbA | [ |
| rbcL | [ |
| trnH-psbA | [ |
| Trns-L | [ |
| UPA | [ |
Barcode regions reported in different life forms.
| Barcoding regions | Examples |
|---|---|
| Animals (COI) |
|
| Plants (matK, rbcL, psbA-trnH, ITS) | Rhubarb, |
|
| |
| Paris spp. and adulterants, | |
|
| |
| Bacteria (COI, rpoB, 16S rRNA, Cpn60, Tuf) | Wolbachia, |
| Fungi (ITS, RPB1, RPB2, 18S (SSU)) |
|
| Birds (Mitochondrial COI-5′ and COI-3′) | Herring Gull Larusargentatus, 14 Lesser Black-backed Gull Larusfuscus Caspian, Iceland Gull Larusglaucoides, Glaucous Gull Larushyperboreus, Great Skua Stercorarius skua |
| Marine life (COI) | Carangids, Clupeids, Scombrids, Groupers, Sciaenids, Silverbellies, Mullids, Polynemids, and Silurids. malacostracan species, |