Mammal mitogenomics from invertebrate‐derived DNA

Author:

Danabalan Renita12,Merkel Kevin34,Bærholm Schnell Ida5,Arandjelovic Mimi67,Boesch Christophe6,Brazzola Gregory6,Dieguez Paula7,Dupain Jef8,Kambale‐Vyalengerera Magloire6,Kühl Hjalmar S.67,Hoffmann Constanze3,Lapuente Juan6,Ngoc Thinh Van910,Zimmermann Fee31112,Leendertz Fabian H.312,Gilbert M. Thomas P.513,Roos Christian9,Mazzoni Camila12,Gogarten Jan F.341214ORCID,Calvignac‐Spencer Sébastien34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research Berlin Germany

2. Berlin Centre for Genomics and Biodiversity Research Berlin Germany

3. Epidemiology of Highly Pathogenic Organisms Robert Koch Institute Berlin Germany

4. Viral Evolution Robert Koch Institute Berlin Germany

5. Centre for Evolutionary Hologenomics The Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

6. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig Germany

7. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Leipzig‐Jena Leipzig Germany

8. Antwerp Zoo Foundation Royal Zoological Society Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

9. German Primate Center Leibniz Institute for Primate Research Göttingen Germany

10. World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Vietnam Hanoi Vietnam

11. Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology Munich Germany

12. Helmholtz Institute for One Health Greifswald Germany

13. NTNU University Museum Trondheim Norway

14. Applied Zoology and Nature Conservation University of Greifswald Greifswald Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe metabarcoding of vertebrate DNA found in invertebrate‐derived DNA (iDNA) has proven a powerful tool for monitoring biodiversity. To date, iDNA has primarily been used to detect the presence/absence of particular taxa using metabarcoding, though recent efforts demonstrated the potential utility of these data for estimating relative animal abundance. Here, we test whether iDNA can also be used to reconstruct complete mammalian mitogenomes and therefore bring the field closer to population‐level analyses. Specifically, we used mitogenomic hybridization capture coupled with high‐throughput sequencing to analyze individual (N = 7) or pooled (N = 5) fly‐derived DNA extracts, and individual (N = 7) or pooled (N = 1) leech‐derived DNA extracts, which were known a priori to contain primate DNA. All sources of iDNA showed their ability to generate large amounts of mammalian mitogenomic information and deeper sequencing of libraries is predicted to allow for even more complete recovery of primate mitogenomes from most samples (90%). Sixty percent of these iDNA extracts allowed for the recovery of (near) complete mammalian mitochondrial genomes (hereafter mitogenomes) that proved useable for phylogenomic analyses. These findings contribute to paving the way for iDNA‐based population mitogenomic studies of terrestrial mammals.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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