4.7 Article

Ciliate Diversity From Aquatic Environments in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest as Revealed by High-Throughput DNA Sequencing

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 3, Pages 630-643

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-020-01612-8

Keywords

Alveolates; Metabarcoding; Eukaryote diversity; Protists; V4-18S rDNA

Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) [E-26/202.325/2018, E-26/202.326/2018]
  2. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq) [426648/2016-1]
  3. CNPq [140627/2019-7, 304093/2016-5, 311577/2019-9]

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The study investigated the diversity of ciliates in freshwater and brackish environments along the Brazilian Atlantic Forest and found differences in ciliate communities between these habitats, with highly abundant and low-abundant or rare OTUs. Additionally, a considerable fraction of ciliate diversity in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest detected through HTS was not represented in the currently available molecular databases.
Rainforest aquatic ecosystems include complex habitats with scarce information on their unicellular eukaryote diversity and community structure. We have investigated the diversity of ciliates in freshwater and brackish environments along the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, based on the hypervariable V4 region of the 18S-rDNA obtained by high-throughput DNA sequencing. Our analyses detected 409 ciliate taxonomic units (OTUs), mostly attributed to the classes Oligohymenophorea and Spirotrichea. A total of 11 classes, 12 subclasses, 112 genera, and 144 species were reported. We found the following: (a) the ciliate communities are more diverse in freshwater- than in Atlantic Forest-associated brackish environments; (b) the ciliate communities are composed by a small amount of highly abundant OTUs, but a high number of low-abundant or rare OTUs; (c) nearly one-third of the ciliate OTUs share less than 97% sequence identity to reference sequences and (d) phylogenetic inference supports the hypothesis that the V4 region of the Ciliophora 18S-rDNA is a suitable marker for accurate evolutionary inferences at class level. Our results showed that a considerable fraction of the HTS-detected diversity of ciliates from Brazilian Atlantic Forest is not represented in the currently available molecular databases.

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