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Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest

Piper is one of two large genera in the Piperaceae, and with ca. 2600 species, is one of the largest plant genera in the world. Species delimitation and evaluation of genetic diversity among populations are important requisites for conservation and adequate exploitation of economically important spe...

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Autores principales: Egydio Brandão, Anary P. M., Yamaguchi, Lydia F., Tepe, Eric J., Salatino, Antonio, Kato, Massuo J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7571689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33075070
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239056
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author Egydio Brandão, Anary P. M.
Yamaguchi, Lydia F.
Tepe, Eric J.
Salatino, Antonio
Kato, Massuo J.
author_facet Egydio Brandão, Anary P. M.
Yamaguchi, Lydia F.
Tepe, Eric J.
Salatino, Antonio
Kato, Massuo J.
author_sort Egydio Brandão, Anary P. M.
collection PubMed
description Piper is one of two large genera in the Piperaceae, and with ca. 2600 species, is one of the largest plant genera in the world. Species delimitation and evaluation of genetic diversity among populations are important requisites for conservation and adequate exploitation of economically important species. DNA barcoding has been used as a powerful tool and a practical method for species characterization and delimitation. The present work aims to evaluate molecular markers for barcoding three Piper species native to Brazil: P. gaudichaudianum (“jaborandi” or “pariparoba”), P. malacophyllum (“pariparoba-murta”) and P. regnellii (“caapeba” or “pariparoba”). A reference DNA barcode library was developed using sequences of three candidate regions: ITS2, trnH-psbA and rbcL. Transferability of the microsatellite (SSR) primers Psol 3, Psol 6 and Psol 10, designed originally for Piper solmsianum, to the three Piper species was also evaluated. The discriminatory power of the markers was based on the determination of inter- and intraspecific distances, phylogenetic reconstruction, and clustering analysis, as well as BLASTn comparison. Sequences of ITS2 enabled efficient species identification by means of the BLASTn procedure. Based on these sequences, intraspecific divergence was lower than interspecific variation. Maximum Parsimony analyses based on ITS2 sequences provided three resolved clades, each corresponding to one of the three analysed species. Sequences of trnH-psbA and rbcL had lower discriminatory value. Analyses combining sequences of these regions were less effective toward the attainment of resolved and strongly supported clades of all species. In summary, robustly supported clades of P. regnellii were obtained in most of the analyses, based either on isolated or combined sequences. The SSRs primers Psol 3, Psol 6 and Psol 10 were shown to be transferable to P. gaudichaudianum and P. regnellii, but not to P. malacophyllum. Preliminary cluster analyses based on the polymorphism of the amplified products suggested that Psol 3 has lower potential than Psol 6 and Psol 10 for discrimination of Piper species.
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spelling pubmed-75716892020-10-26 Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest Egydio Brandão, Anary P. M. Yamaguchi, Lydia F. Tepe, Eric J. Salatino, Antonio Kato, Massuo J. PLoS One Research Article Piper is one of two large genera in the Piperaceae, and with ca. 2600 species, is one of the largest plant genera in the world. Species delimitation and evaluation of genetic diversity among populations are important requisites for conservation and adequate exploitation of economically important species. DNA barcoding has been used as a powerful tool and a practical method for species characterization and delimitation. The present work aims to evaluate molecular markers for barcoding three Piper species native to Brazil: P. gaudichaudianum (“jaborandi” or “pariparoba”), P. malacophyllum (“pariparoba-murta”) and P. regnellii (“caapeba” or “pariparoba”). A reference DNA barcode library was developed using sequences of three candidate regions: ITS2, trnH-psbA and rbcL. Transferability of the microsatellite (SSR) primers Psol 3, Psol 6 and Psol 10, designed originally for Piper solmsianum, to the three Piper species was also evaluated. The discriminatory power of the markers was based on the determination of inter- and intraspecific distances, phylogenetic reconstruction, and clustering analysis, as well as BLASTn comparison. Sequences of ITS2 enabled efficient species identification by means of the BLASTn procedure. Based on these sequences, intraspecific divergence was lower than interspecific variation. Maximum Parsimony analyses based on ITS2 sequences provided three resolved clades, each corresponding to one of the three analysed species. Sequences of trnH-psbA and rbcL had lower discriminatory value. Analyses combining sequences of these regions were less effective toward the attainment of resolved and strongly supported clades of all species. In summary, robustly supported clades of P. regnellii were obtained in most of the analyses, based either on isolated or combined sequences. The SSRs primers Psol 3, Psol 6 and Psol 10 were shown to be transferable to P. gaudichaudianum and P. regnellii, but not to P. malacophyllum. Preliminary cluster analyses based on the polymorphism of the amplified products suggested that Psol 3 has lower potential than Psol 6 and Psol 10 for discrimination of Piper species. Public Library of Science 2020-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7571689/ /pubmed/33075070 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239056 Text en © 2020 Egydio Brandão 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, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Egydio Brandão, Anary P. M.
Yamaguchi, Lydia F.
Tepe, Eric J.
Salatino, Antonio
Kato, Massuo J.
Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest
title Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest
title_full Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest
title_fullStr Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest
title_short Evaluation of DNA markers for molecular identification of three Piper species from Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest
title_sort evaluation of dna markers for molecular identification of three piper species from brazilian atlantic rainforest
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7571689/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33075070
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239056
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