Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA

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Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA. / Paijmans, Johanna L. A.; Fickel, Joerns; Courtiol, Alexandre et al.
Yn: Molecular Ecology Resources, Cyfrol 16, Rhif 1, 01.01.2016, t. 42-55.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Paijmans, JLA, Fickel, J, Courtiol, A, Hofreiter, M & Förster, DW 2016, 'Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA', Molecular Ecology Resources, cyfrol. 16, rhif 1, tt. 42-55. https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.12420

APA

Paijmans, J. L. A., Fickel, J., Courtiol, A., Hofreiter, M., & Förster, D. W. (2016). Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA. Molecular Ecology Resources, 16(1), 42-55. https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.12420

CBE

Paijmans JLA, Fickel J, Courtiol A, Hofreiter M, Förster DW. 2016. Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA. Molecular Ecology Resources. 16(1):42-55. https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.12420

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Paijmans JLA, Fickel J, Courtiol A, Hofreiter M, Förster DW. Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA. Molecular Ecology Resources. 2016 Ion 1;16(1):42-55. Epub 2015 Ebr 27. doi: 10.1111/1755-0998.12420

Author

Paijmans, Johanna L. A. ; Fickel, Joerns ; Courtiol, Alexandre et al. / Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA. Yn: Molecular Ecology Resources. 2016 ; Cyfrol 16, Rhif 1. tt. 42-55.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact of enrichment conditions on cross-species capture of fresh and degraded DNA

AU - Paijmans, Johanna L. A.

AU - Fickel, Joerns

AU - Courtiol, Alexandre

AU - Hofreiter, Michael

AU - Förster, Daniel W.

PY - 2016/1/1

Y1 - 2016/1/1

N2 - By combining high-throughput sequencing with target enrichment (‘hybridization capture’), researchers are able to obtain molecular data from genomic regions of interest for projects that are otherwise constrained by sample quality (e.g. degraded and contamination-rich samples) or a lack of a priori sequence information (e.g. studies on nonmodel species). Despite the use of hybridization capture in various fields of research for many years, the impact of enrichment conditions on capture success is not yet thoroughly understood. We evaluated the impact of a key parameter – hybridization temperature – on the capture success of mitochondrial genomes across the carnivoran family Felidae. Capture was carried out for a range of sample types (fresh, archival, ancient) with varying levels of sequence divergence between bait and target (i.e. across a range of species) using pools of individually indexed libraries on Agilent SureSelect™ arrays. Our results suggest that hybridization capture protocols require specific optimization for the sample type that is being investigated. Hybridization temperature affected the proportion of on-target sequences following capture: for degraded samples, we obtained the best results with a hybridization temperature of 65 °C, while a touchdown approach (65 °C down to 50 °C) yielded the best results for fresh samples. Evaluation of capture performance at a regional scale (sliding window approach) revealed no significant improvement in the recovery of DNA fragments with high sequence divergence from the bait at any of the tested hybridization temperatures, suggesting that hybridization temperature may not be the critical parameter for the enrichment of divergent fragments.

AB - By combining high-throughput sequencing with target enrichment (‘hybridization capture’), researchers are able to obtain molecular data from genomic regions of interest for projects that are otherwise constrained by sample quality (e.g. degraded and contamination-rich samples) or a lack of a priori sequence information (e.g. studies on nonmodel species). Despite the use of hybridization capture in various fields of research for many years, the impact of enrichment conditions on capture success is not yet thoroughly understood. We evaluated the impact of a key parameter – hybridization temperature – on the capture success of mitochondrial genomes across the carnivoran family Felidae. Capture was carried out for a range of sample types (fresh, archival, ancient) with varying levels of sequence divergence between bait and target (i.e. across a range of species) using pools of individually indexed libraries on Agilent SureSelect™ arrays. Our results suggest that hybridization capture protocols require specific optimization for the sample type that is being investigated. Hybridization temperature affected the proportion of on-target sequences following capture: for degraded samples, we obtained the best results with a hybridization temperature of 65 °C, while a touchdown approach (65 °C down to 50 °C) yielded the best results for fresh samples. Evaluation of capture performance at a regional scale (sliding window approach) revealed no significant improvement in the recovery of DNA fragments with high sequence divergence from the bait at any of the tested hybridization temperatures, suggesting that hybridization temperature may not be the critical parameter for the enrichment of divergent fragments.

KW - Felidae

KW - Degraded DNA

KW - Next-Generation Sequencing

KW - hybridization capture

KW - mitogenomes

KW - sequence enrichment

U2 - 10.1111/1755-0998.12420

DO - 10.1111/1755-0998.12420

M3 - Article

VL - 16

SP - 42

EP - 55

JO - Molecular Ecology Resources

JF - Molecular Ecology Resources

SN - 1755-0998

IS - 1

ER -