Placing Environmental Next-Generation Sequencing Amplicons from Microbial Eukaryotes into a Phylogenetic Context
Author(s) -
Micah Dunthorn,
Johannes Otto,
Simon Berger,
Alexandros Stamatakis,
Frédéric Mahé,
Sarah Romac,
Colomban de Vargas,
Stéphane Audic,
BioMarKs Consortium,
Alexandra Stock,
Frank Kauff,
Thorsten Stoeck
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/msu055
Subject(s) - biology , phylogenetic tree , amplicon , evolutionary biology , phylogenetics , clade , environmental dna , context (archaeology) , supertree , dna sequencing , genetics , ecology , gene , paleontology , biodiversity , polymerase chain reaction
Nucleotide positions in the hypervariable V4 and V9 regions of the small subunit (SSU)-rDNA locus are normally difficult to align and are usually removed before standard phylogenetic analyses. Yet, with next-generation sequencing data, amplicons of these regions are all that are available to answer ecological and evolutionary questions that rely on phylogenetic inferences. With ciliates, we asked how inclusion of the V4 or V9 regions, regardless of alignment quality, affects tree topologies using distinct phylogenetic methods (including PairDist that is introduced here). Results show that the best approach is to place V4 amplicons into an alignment of full-length Sanger SSU-rDNA sequences and to infer the phylogenetic tree with RAxML. A sliding window algorithm as implemented in RAxML shows, though, that not all nucleotide positions in the V4 region are better than V9 at inferring the ciliate tree. With this approach and an ancestral-state reconstruction, we use V4 amplicons from European nearshore sampling sites to infer that rather than being primarily terrestrial and freshwater, colpodean ciliates may have repeatedly transitioned from terrestrial/freshwater to marine environments.
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