Evaluating DNA cross-contamination risk using different tissue sampling procedures on board fishing and research vessels

Author:

Anderson Giulia1ORCID,Macdonald Jed I1,Potts Joanne1,Feutry Pierre2,Grewe Peter M2,Boutigny Marion1,Davies Campbell R2,Muir Jeff A1,Roupsard Francois1,Sanchez Caroline1,Nicol Simon J1

Affiliation:

1. Oceanic Fisheries Programme, Fisheries Aquaculture and Marine Ecosystems Division, Pacific Community (SPC) , 98848 Noumea , New Caledonia

2. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Castray Esplanade , Hobart, TAS 7000 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Sample cross-contamination remains a pervasive issue in genetics and genomics. With growing reliance on molecular methods for managing marine resources, the need to ensure the integrity of tissue samples that underpin these methods has never been more pressing. We conducted an experiment on wild-caught bigeye tuna (Thunnus obesus) to assess cross-contamination risk under seven at-sea and laboratory-based tissue sampling treatments. The six at-sea treatments (T1–T6) differ in sampling equipment, cleaning, and storage procedures. Combining observed heterozygosity (Ho) and relatedness coefficients (r) to flag cross-contamination, treatments T2–T6 proved effective at mitigating contamination risk. Each exhibited significantly smaller mean Ho and less Ho variability compared with intentionally contaminated samples in the T1 treatment. In T2-T6, no samples flagged as contaminated based on Ho outlier thresholds and elevated r were traced to the point of sampling at sea. Laboratory-based subsampling of T1 tissue (T7) also led to significantly smaller, less variable Ho values compared to T1, suggesting that recovery of samples contaminated onboard, or those of unknown provenance, is possible. We show that simple adjustments to current tissue sampling protocols dramatically reduce cross-contamination risk for downstream genetic analyses on tunas and potentially on other species and fisheries.

Funder

Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission

European Union

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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