PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS OF THE FRESHWATER ALGA BOLDIA ERYTHROSIPHON (COMPSOPOGONALES, RHODOPHYTA) BASED ON 18S rRNA GENE SEQUENCES

1998 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 555-557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond W. Holton ◽  
Stella A. Boele-Bos ◽  
Wytze T. Stam
2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Verma ◽  
A. Chaudhary ◽  
H. S. Singh

Summary Two species of Thaparocleidus Jain (1952a) were found harboring W. attu from the Ganga River at two localities, Meerut and Farrukhabad, Uttar Pradesh, India, during the period of 2013-2015. Morphology and morphometric study of specimens identified as Thaparocleidus gomtius (Jain, 1952a) Lim, 1996 and T. sudhakari (Gusev, 1976) Lim, 1996. Molecular analyses using the 18S rRNA gene confirmed the validity of T. gomtius and T. sudhakari and demonstrated that both the species clustered with other Thaparocleidus species from different geographical regions. We aim at reassessing the taxonomy and establishing the phylogenetic relationships among these two redescribed species with other representatives of the genus Thaparocleidus.


Mycologia ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory S. Saenz ◽  
John W. Taylor ◽  
Andrea Gargas

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Xu Zhong ◽  
Anna Cho ◽  
Christophe M. Deeg ◽  
Amy M. Chan ◽  
Curtis A. Suttle

Abstract BackgroundThe microbiome affects the health of plants and animals, including humans, and has many biological, ecological and evolutionary consequences. Microbiome studies typically rely on sequencing ribosomal 16S RNA gene fragments, which serve as taxonomic markers for prokaryotic communities; however, for eukaryotic microbes this approach is compromised, because 18S rRNA gene sequences from microbial eukaryotes are swamped by contaminating host rRNA gene sequences. ResultsTo overcome this problem, we developed CRISPR-Cas Selective Amplicon Sequencing (CCSAS), a high-resolution and efficient approach for characterizing eukaryotic microbiomes. CCSAS uses taxon-specific single-guide RNA (sgRNA) to direct Cas9 to cut 18S rRNA gene sequences of the host, while leaving protistan and fungal sequences intact. We validated the specificity of the sgRNA on ten model organisms and an artificially constructed (mock) community of nine protistan and fungal pathogens. The results showed that >96.5% of host rRNA gene amplicons were cleaved, while 18S rRNA gene sequences from protists and fungi were unaffected. When used to assess the eukaryotic microbiome of oyster spat from a hatchery, CCSAS revealed a diverse community of eukaryotic microbes, typically with much less contamination from oyster 18S rRNA gene sequences than other methods using non-metazoan or blocking primers. However, each method revealed taxonomic groups that were not detected using the other methods, showing that a single approach is unlikely to uncover the entire eukaryotic microbiome in complex communities. To facilitate the application of CCSAS, we designed taxon-specific sgRNA for ~16,000 metazoan and plant taxa, making CCSAS widely available for characterizing eukaryotic microbiomes that have largely been neglected. ConclusionCCSAS provides a high-through-put and cost-effective approach for resolving the eukaryotic microbiome of metazoa and plants with minimal contamination from host 18S rRNA gene sequences. Keywords: Eukaryotic microbiome, 18S rRNA gene, Microeukaryote, CRISPR-Cas, Taxon-specific single-guide RNA, gRNA-target-site, CasOligo, CCSAS


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