AI Article Synopsis

  • DNA barcoding is a technique that uses unique DNA sequences to identify species, and researchers are currently looking for effective markers for diatoms.
  • Several potential markers have been identified, including those from mitochondrial, plastidial, and nuclear DNA, and the study focused on the V4 region of the nuclear 18S rRNA gene.
  • The study found that the V4 barcode can effectively distinguish around 97% of centric diatom species, suggesting it could be a strong candidate for species identification, especially when paired with DNA character analysis.

Article Abstract

DNA barcoding is a molecular tool that exploits a unique DNA sequence of a standardized gene or non-coding region for the species identification of unknown individuals. The investigation into a suitable barcode for diatoms is ongoing and there are several promising candidates including mitochondrial, plastidial and nuclear markers. We analyzed 272 sequences from 76 diatoms species in the orders Thalassiosirales, Lithodesmiales and Cymatosirales, using distance and character based approaches, to assess the applicability of a DNA barcode based on the hypervariable V4 region of the nuclear 18S rRNA gene. We show that the proposed V4 barcode separated ca. 97% of all centric diatom taxa tested using a threshold p-distance of 0.02 and that many problem pairs were further separated using a character based approach. The reliability of amplification, extensive reference library and variability seen in the V4 region make it the most promising candidate to date for a barcode marker for diatoms particularly when combined with DNA character analysis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3448646PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0045664PLOS

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