Strategies for sample labelling and library preparation in DNA metabarcoding studies.
Authors
Bista, Iliana
Publication Date
2022-05Journal Title
Mol Ecol Resour
ISSN
1755-098X
Publisher
Wiley
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
AO
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Bohmann, K., Elbrecht, V., Carøe, C., Bista, I., Leese, F., Bunce, M., Yu, D. W., et al. (2022). Strategies for sample labelling and library preparation in DNA metabarcoding studies.. Mol Ecol Resour https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13512
Abstract
Metabarcoding of DNA extracted from environmental or bulk specimen samples is increasingly used to profile biota in basic and applied biodiversity research because of its targeted nature that allows sequencing of genetic markers from many samples in parallel. To achieve this, PCR amplification is carried out with primers designed to target a taxonomically informative marker within a taxonomic group, and sample-specific nucleotide identifiers are added to the amplicons prior to sequencing. The latter enables assignment of the sequences back to the samples they originated from. Nucleotide identifiers can be added during the metabarcoding PCR and during "library preparation", that is, when amplicons are prepared for sequencing. Different strategies to achieve this labelling exist. All have advantages, challenges and limitations, some of which can lead to misleading results, and in the worst case compromise the fidelity of the metabarcoding data. Given the range of questions addressed using metabarcoding, ensuring that data generation is robust and fit for the chosen purpose is critically important for practitioners seeking to employ metabarcoding for biodiversity assessments. Here, we present an overview of the three main workflows for sample-specific labelling and library preparation in metabarcoding studies on Illumina sequencing platforms; one-step PCR, two-step PCR, and tagged PCR. Further, we distill the key considerations for researchers seeking to select an appropriate metabarcoding strategy for their specific study. Ultimately, by gaining insights into the consequences of different metabarcoding workflows, we hope to further consolidate the power of metabarcoding as a tool to assess biodiversity across a range of applications.
Keywords
INVITED TECHNICAL REVIEW, INVITED TECHNICAL REVIEWS, amplicon sequencing, biodiversity assessment, eDNA, environmental DNA, high‐throughput sequencing, Illumina sequencing, library preparation
Sponsorship
NERC Biomolecular Analysis Facility (NE/M02086X/1, NE/N003756/1, NE/N006216/1, NE/S000291/1, NE/S005560/1, NE/S006958/1)
Carlsbergfondet (CF18‐1110)
H2020 European Research Council (856488)
Det Frie Forskningsråd (5051‐00140)
Wellcome (WT207492, 104640/Z/14/Z, 092096/Z/10/Z)
Identifiers
men13512
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13512
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/329339
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Statistics
Total file downloads (since January 2020). For more information on metrics see the
IRUS guide.