Telling plant species apart with DNA: from barcodes to genomes.
Peter M HollingsworthDe-Zhu LiMichelle van der BankAlex D TwyfordPublished in: Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences (2017)
Land plants underpin a multitude of ecosystem functions, support human livelihoods and represent a critically important component of terrestrial biodiversity-yet many tens of thousands of species await discovery, and plant identification remains a substantial challenge, especially where material is juvenile, fragmented or processed. In this opinion article, we tackle two main topics. Firstly, we provide a short summary of the strengths and limitations of plant DNA barcoding for addressing these issues. Secondly, we discuss options for enhancing current plant barcodes, focusing on increasing discriminatory power via either gene capture of nuclear markers or genome skimming. The former has the advantage of establishing a defined set of target loci maximizing efficiency of sequencing effort, data storage and analysis. The challenge is developing a probe set for large numbers of nuclear markers that works over sufficient phylogenetic breadth. Genome skimming has the advantage of using existing protocols and being backward compatible with existing barcodes; and the depth of sequence coverage can be increased as sequencing costs fall. Its non-targeted nature does, however, present a major informatics challenge for upscaling to large sample sets.This article is part of the themed issue 'From DNA barcodes to biomes'.
Keyphrases
- circulating tumor
- genome wide
- cell free
- single molecule
- climate change
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- electronic health record
- big data
- nucleic acid
- small molecule
- dna methylation
- cell wall
- high throughput
- living cells
- cancer therapy
- circulating tumor cells
- optical coherence tomography
- gene expression
- artificial intelligence
- transcription factor
- genome wide association
- amino acid