Evaluation of Filtration and DNA Extraction Methods for Environmental DNA Biodiversity Assessments across Multiple Trophic Levels.
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Date
2017Author
Djurhuus, Anni
Port, Jesse
Closek, Collin J.
Yamahara, Kevan M.
Romero-Maraccini, Ofelia
Walz, Kristine R.
Goldsmith, Dawn B.
Michisaki, Reiko
Breitbart, Mya
Boehm, Alexandria B.
Chavez, Francisco P.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Metabarcoding of marine environmental DNA (eDNA), originating from tissue, cells,
or extracellular DNA, offers the opportunity to survey the biological composition of
communities across multiple trophic levels from a non-invasive seawater sample. Here
we compare results of eDNA metabarcoding of multiple trophic levels from individual
seawater samples collected from a kelp forest in Monterey Bay, California in order to
establish methods for future cross-trophic level eDNA analysis. Triplicate 1 L water
samples were filtered using five different 47mm diameter membrane filters (PVDF, PES,
GFF, PCTE, and NC) and DNA was extracted from triplicates of each filter-type using
three widely-used extraction methods (the DNeasy Blood and Tissue kit, the MoBio
PowerWater DNA Isolation kit, and standard phenol/chloroform methods) resulting in 45
individual eDNA samples prepared with 15 workflow combinations. Each DNA extract
was amplified using PCR primers for the 16S rRNA gene (microorga.....
Journal
Frontiers in Marine ScienceVolume
4Issue
Article 314Page Range
11pp.Document Language
enBest Practice Type
GuideDOI Original
10.3389/fmars.2017.00314Citation
Djurhuus, A. ; Port, J.; Closek, C.J.; Yamahara, K.M.; Romero-Maraccini, O.; Walz, K.R.; Goldsmith, D.B.; Michisak,i R.; Breitbart, M.; Boehm, A.B. and Chavez, F.P. (2017) Evaluation of Filtration and DNA Extraction Methods for Environmental DNA Biodiversity Assessments across Multiple Trophic Levels. Frontiers in Marine Science, 4:314, 11pp. DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2017.00314Collections