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Exploring the accuracy of amplicon‐based internal transcribed spacer markers for a fungal community
Author(s) -
Li Shuzhen,
Deng Ye,
Wang Zhujun,
Zhang Zhaojing,
Kong Xiao,
Zhou Wenjun,
Yi Yanyun,
Qu Yuanyuan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
molecular ecology resources
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.96
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1755-0998
pISSN - 1755-098X
DOI - 10.1111/1755-0998.13097
Subject(s) - biology , primer (cosmetics) , internal transcribed spacer , amplicon , computational biology , in silico pcr , in silico , environmental dna , selection (genetic algorithm) , genetics , evolutionary biology , polymerase chain reaction , biodiversity , ribosomal rna , ecology , gene , computer science , artificial intelligence , chemistry , organic chemistry , multiplex polymerase chain reaction
With the continual improvement in high‐throughput sequencing technology and constant updates to fungal reference databases, the use of amplicon‐based DNA markers as a tool to reveal fungal diversity and composition in various ecosystems has become feasible. However, both primer selection and the experimental procedure require meticulous verification. Here, we computationally and experimentally evaluated the accuracy and specificity of three widely used or newly designed internal transcribed spacer (ITS) primer sets (ITS1F/ITS2, gITS7/ITS4 and 5.8S‐Fun/ITS4‐Fun). In silico evaluation revealed that primer coverage varied at different taxonomic levels due to differences in degeneracy and the location of primer sets. Using even and staggered mock community standards, we identified different proportions of chimeric and mismatch reads generated by different primer sets, as well as great variation in species abundances, suggesting that primer selection would affect the results of amplicon‐based metabarcoding studies. Choosing proofreading and high‐fidelity polymerase (KAPA HiFi) could significantly reduce the percentage of chimeric and mismatch sequences, further reducing inflation of operational taxonomic units. Moreover, for two types of environmental fungal communities, plant endophytic and soil fungi, it was demonstrated that the three primer sets could not reach a consensus on fungal community composition or diversity, and that primer selection, not experimental treatment, determines observed soil fungal community diversity and composition. Future DNA marker surveys should pay greater attention to potential primer effects and improve the experimental scheme to increase credibility and accuracy.

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