Group-specific environmental sequencing reveals high levels of ecological heterogeneity across the microsporidian radiation

被引:30
|
作者
Williams, Bryony A. P. [1 ]
Hamilton, Kristina M. [1 ]
Jones, Meredith D. [2 ]
Bass, David [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Exeter, Biosci, Geoffrey Pope Bldg, Exeter EX4 4QD, Devon, England
[2] Nat Hist Museum, Cromwell Rd, London SW7 5BD, Kensington, England
[3] Cefas, Barrack Rd, Weymouth DT4 8UB, Dorset, England
来源
ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY REPORTS | 2018年 / 10卷 / 03期
关键词
PHYLOGENY; DIVERSITY; PARASITES; TOOL;
D O I
10.1111/1758-2229.12642
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The description of diversity is a key imperative in current biological studies and has been revolutionised by the molecular era that allows easy access to microbial diversity not visible to the naked eye. Broadly targeted SSU rRNA gene amplicon studies of diverse environmental habitats continue to reveal new microbial eukaryotic diversity. However, some eukaryotic lineages, particularly parasites, have divergent SSU sequences, and are therefore undersampled or excluded by the methodologies used for SSU studies. One such group is the Microsporidia, which have particularly divergent SSU sequences and are rarely detected in even large-scale amplicon studies. This is a serious omission as microsporidia are diverse and important parasites of humans and other animals of socio-economic importance. Whilst estimates of other microbial diversity are expanding, our knowledge of true microsporidian diversity has remained largely static. In this work, we have combined high throughput sequencing, broad environmental sampling and microsporidian-specific primers to broaden our understanding of the evolutionary diversity of the Microsporidia. Mapping our new sequences onto a tree of known microsporidian diversity we uncover new diversity across all areas of the microsporidian tree and uncover clades dominated by novel sequences, with no close described relatives.
引用
收藏
页码:328 / 336
页数:9
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] Identifying group-specific primers for environmental Heterolobosa by high-throughput sequencing
    Delafont, Vincent
    Mercier, Anne
    Barrouilhet, Stephanie
    Mollichella, Marie-Laure
    Herbelin, Pascaline
    Hechard, Yann
    MICROBIAL BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2022, 15 (09): : 2476 - 2487
  • [2] Tests for group-specific heterogeneity in high-dimensional factor models
    Djogbenou, Antoine
    Sufana, Razvan
    JOURNAL OF MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS, 2024, 199
  • [3] Challenge of ambiguity to high resolution typing using group-specific sequencing-based typing technology
    Chen, Dong-Feng
    DeOliveira, Angelica X.
    Balgansuren, Gansuvd
    Holeman, Bobbie B.
    TISSUE ANTIGENS, 2010, 75 (05): : 539 - 540
  • [4] HIGH-LEVELS OF GROUP-SPECIFIC COMPONENT (VITAMIN-D-BINDING PROTEIN) IN THE CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID OF INFANTS AGED LESS-THAN-2 MONTHS
    KATIKANENI, LP
    EMERSON, DL
    GOLDSCHMIDTCLERMONT, PJ
    LOADHOLT, BC
    LEVKOFF, AH
    GALBRAITH, RM
    BIOLOGY OF THE NEONATE, 1987, 52 (05): : 250 - 255
  • [5] New high resolution typing strategy for HLA-A locus alleles based on dye terminator sequencing of haplotypic group-specific PCR-amplicons of exon 2 and exon 3
    Kurz, B
    Steiert, I
    Heuchert, G
    Müller, CA
    TISSUE ANTIGENS, 1999, 53 (01): : 81 - 96
  • [6] Full-length 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing reveals the variation of epibiotic microbiota associated with two shrimp species of Alvinocarididae: possibly co-determined by environmental heterogeneity and specific recognition of hosts
    Hui, Min
    Wang, Aiyang
    Cheng, Jiao
    Sha, Zhongli
    PEERJ, 2022, 10