4.7 Article

Looking for Hidden Enemies of Metabarcoding: Species Composition, Habitat and Management Can Strongly Influence DNA Extraction while Examining Grassland Communities

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11020318

Keywords

DNA quality; belowground diversity; graminoid vegetation; Central Europe; roots; DNA extraction

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2017/25/B/NZ8/00572, 2019/35/B/NZ8/03358]

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The study found that factors such as vegetation type, soil conductometry, and soil pH significantly influence the DNA quality of belowground samples, while season, management intensity, and certain species have the highest impact on aboveground vegetation. Factors like sample size, soil properties, and nutrient content are important for DNA extraction effectiveness.
Despite the raising preoccupation, the critical question of how the plant community is composed belowground still remains unresolved, particularly for the conservation priority types of vegetation. The usefulness of metabarcoding analysis of the belowground parts of the plant community is subjected to a considerable bias, that often impedes detection of all species in a sample due to insufficient DNA quality or quantity. In the presented study we have attempted to find environmental factors that determine the amount and quality of DNA extracted from total plant tissue from aboveand belowground samples (1000 and 10,000 cm(2)). We analyzed the influence of land use intensity, soil properties, species composition, and season on DNA extraction. The most important factors for DNA quality were vegetation type, soil conductometry (EC), and soil pH for the belowground samples. The species that significantly decreased the DNA quality were Calamagrostis epigejos, Coronilla varia, and Holcus lanatus. For the aboveground part of the vegetation, the season, management intensity, and certain species-with the most prominent being Centaurea rhenana and Cirsium canum-have the highest influence. Additionally, we found that sample size, soil granulation, MgO, organic C, K2O, and total soil N content are important for DNA extraction effectiveness. Both low EC and pH reduce significantly the yield and quality of DNA. Identifying the potential inhibitors of DNA isolation and predicting difficulties of sampling the vegetation plots for metabarcoding analysis will help to optimize the universal, low-cost multi-stage DNA extraction procedure in molecular ecology studies.

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