Cargando…

Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities

Sequencing environmental DNA (eDNA) is increasingly being used as an alternative to traditional morphological-based identification to characterize biological assemblages and monitor anthropogenic impacts in marine environments. Most studies only assess eDNA which, compared to eRNA, can persist longe...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Laroche, Olivier, Wood, Susanna A., Tremblay, Louis A., Lear, Gavin, Ellis, Joanne I., Pochon, Xavier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5437860/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28533985
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.3347
_version_ 1783237671294861312
author Laroche, Olivier
Wood, Susanna A.
Tremblay, Louis A.
Lear, Gavin
Ellis, Joanne I.
Pochon, Xavier
author_facet Laroche, Olivier
Wood, Susanna A.
Tremblay, Louis A.
Lear, Gavin
Ellis, Joanne I.
Pochon, Xavier
author_sort Laroche, Olivier
collection PubMed
description Sequencing environmental DNA (eDNA) is increasingly being used as an alternative to traditional morphological-based identification to characterize biological assemblages and monitor anthropogenic impacts in marine environments. Most studies only assess eDNA which, compared to eRNA, can persist longer in the environment after cell death. Therefore, eRNA may provide a more immediate census of the environment due to its relatively weaker stability, leading some researchers to advocate for the use of eRNA as an additional, or perhaps superior proxy for portraying ecological changes. A variety of pre-treatment techniques for screening eDNA and eRNA derived operational taxonomic units (OTUs) have been employed prior to statistical analyses, including removing singleton taxa (i.e., OTUs found only once) and discarding those not present in both eDNA and eRNA datasets. In this study, we used bacterial (16S ribosomal RNA gene) and eukaryotic (18S ribosomal RNA gene) eDNA- and eRNA-derived data from benthic communities collected at increasing distances along a transect from an oil production platform (Taranaki, New Zealand). Macro-infauna (visual classification of benthic invertebrates) and physico-chemical data were analyzed in parallel. We tested the effect of removing singleton taxa, and removing taxa not present in the eDNA and eRNA libraries from the same environmental sample (trimmed by shared OTUs), by comparing the impact of the oil production platform on alpha- and beta-diversity of the eDNA/eRNA-based biological assemblages, and by correlating these to the morphologically identified macro-faunal communities and the physico-chemical data. When trimmed by singletons, presence/absence information from eRNA data represented the best proxy to detect changes on species diversity for both bacteria and eukaryotes. However, assessment of quantitative beta-diversity from read abundance information of bacteria eRNA did not, contrary to eDNA, reveal any impact from the oil production activity. Overall, the data appeared more robust when trimmed by shared OTUs, showing a greater effect of the platform on alpha- and beta-diversity. Trimming by shared OTUs likely removes taxa derived from legacy DNA and technical artefacts introduced through reverse transcriptase, polymerase-chain-reaction and sequencing. Findings from our scoping study suggest that metabarcoding-based biomonitoring surveys should, if funds, time and expertise allow, be assessed using both eDNA and eRNA products.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5437860
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-54378602017-05-22 Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities Laroche, Olivier Wood, Susanna A. Tremblay, Louis A. Lear, Gavin Ellis, Joanne I. Pochon, Xavier PeerJ Bioinformatics Sequencing environmental DNA (eDNA) is increasingly being used as an alternative to traditional morphological-based identification to characterize biological assemblages and monitor anthropogenic impacts in marine environments. Most studies only assess eDNA which, compared to eRNA, can persist longer in the environment after cell death. Therefore, eRNA may provide a more immediate census of the environment due to its relatively weaker stability, leading some researchers to advocate for the use of eRNA as an additional, or perhaps superior proxy for portraying ecological changes. A variety of pre-treatment techniques for screening eDNA and eRNA derived operational taxonomic units (OTUs) have been employed prior to statistical analyses, including removing singleton taxa (i.e., OTUs found only once) and discarding those not present in both eDNA and eRNA datasets. In this study, we used bacterial (16S ribosomal RNA gene) and eukaryotic (18S ribosomal RNA gene) eDNA- and eRNA-derived data from benthic communities collected at increasing distances along a transect from an oil production platform (Taranaki, New Zealand). Macro-infauna (visual classification of benthic invertebrates) and physico-chemical data were analyzed in parallel. We tested the effect of removing singleton taxa, and removing taxa not present in the eDNA and eRNA libraries from the same environmental sample (trimmed by shared OTUs), by comparing the impact of the oil production platform on alpha- and beta-diversity of the eDNA/eRNA-based biological assemblages, and by correlating these to the morphologically identified macro-faunal communities and the physico-chemical data. When trimmed by singletons, presence/absence information from eRNA data represented the best proxy to detect changes on species diversity for both bacteria and eukaryotes. However, assessment of quantitative beta-diversity from read abundance information of bacteria eRNA did not, contrary to eDNA, reveal any impact from the oil production activity. Overall, the data appeared more robust when trimmed by shared OTUs, showing a greater effect of the platform on alpha- and beta-diversity. Trimming by shared OTUs likely removes taxa derived from legacy DNA and technical artefacts introduced through reverse transcriptase, polymerase-chain-reaction and sequencing. Findings from our scoping study suggest that metabarcoding-based biomonitoring surveys should, if funds, time and expertise allow, be assessed using both eDNA and eRNA products. PeerJ Inc. 2017-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5437860/ /pubmed/28533985 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.3347 Text en ©2017 Laroche et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Bioinformatics
Laroche, Olivier
Wood, Susanna A.
Tremblay, Louis A.
Lear, Gavin
Ellis, Joanne I.
Pochon, Xavier
Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
title Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
title_full Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
title_fullStr Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
title_full_unstemmed Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
title_short Metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental DNA and RNA data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
title_sort metabarcoding monitoring analysis: the pros and cons of using co-extracted environmental dna and rna data to assess offshore oil production impacts on benthic communities
topic Bioinformatics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5437860/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28533985
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.3347
work_keys_str_mv AT larocheolivier metabarcodingmonitoringanalysistheprosandconsofusingcoextractedenvironmentaldnaandrnadatatoassessoffshoreoilproductionimpactsonbenthiccommunities
AT woodsusannaa metabarcodingmonitoringanalysistheprosandconsofusingcoextractedenvironmentaldnaandrnadatatoassessoffshoreoilproductionimpactsonbenthiccommunities
AT tremblaylouisa metabarcodingmonitoringanalysistheprosandconsofusingcoextractedenvironmentaldnaandrnadatatoassessoffshoreoilproductionimpactsonbenthiccommunities
AT leargavin metabarcodingmonitoringanalysistheprosandconsofusingcoextractedenvironmentaldnaandrnadatatoassessoffshoreoilproductionimpactsonbenthiccommunities
AT ellisjoannei metabarcodingmonitoringanalysistheprosandconsofusingcoextractedenvironmentaldnaandrnadatatoassessoffshoreoilproductionimpactsonbenthiccommunities
AT pochonxavier metabarcodingmonitoringanalysistheprosandconsofusingcoextractedenvironmentaldnaandrnadatatoassessoffshoreoilproductionimpactsonbenthiccommunities