Molecular Ecology Resources | 2021

Long‐ and short‐read metabarcoding technologies reveal similar spatiotemporal structures in fungal communities

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Fungi form diverse communities and play essential roles in many terrestrial ecosystems, yet there are methodological challenges in taxonomic and phylogenetic placement of fungi from environmental sequences. To address such challenges, we investigated spatiotemporal structure of a fungal community using soil metabarcoding with four different sequencing strategies: short‐amplicon sequencing of the ITS2 region (300–400 bp) with Illumina MiSeq, Ion Torrent Ion S5 and PacBio RS II, all from the same PCR library, as well as long‐amplicon sequencing of the full ITS and partial LSU regions (1200–1600 bp) with PacBio RS II. Resulting community structure and diversity depended more on statistical method than sequencing technology. The use of long‐amplicon sequencing enables construction of a phylogenetic tree from metabarcoding reads, which facilitates taxonomic identification of sequences. However, long reads present issues for denoising algorithms in diverse communities. We present a solution that splits the reads into shorter homologous regions prior to denoising, and then reconstructs the full denoised reads. In the choice between short and long amplicons, we suggest a hybrid approach using short amplicons for sampling breadth and depth, and long amplicons to characterize the local species pool for improved identification and phylogenetic analyses.

Volume 21
Pages None
DOI 10.1111/1755-0998.13387
Language English
Journal Molecular Ecology Resources

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