4.7 Article

Opportunities and challenges for high-quality biodiversity tissue archives in the age of long-read sequencing

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 23, Pages 5935-5948

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15909

Keywords

biobanks; DNA degradation; high‐ molecular weight DNA; long‐ read sequencing; Natural History museums; tissue archives

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Modern technologies for characterizing genetic variation at a genome-wide scale offer unprecedented opportunities for studying genetic underpinnings and evolutionary mechanisms that promote and sustain biodiversity. Transitioning from short- to long-read sequencing allows a more comprehensive understanding of genetic diversity over time and space. However, the success of long-read sequencing depends heavily on the integrity of DNA molecules, making the availability of high-quality tissue samples a major concern for projects.
The technological ability to characterize genetic variation at a genome-wide scale provides an unprecedented opportunity to study the genetic underpinnings and evolutionary mechanisms that promote and sustain biodiversity. The transition from short- to long-read sequencing is particularly promising and allows a more holistic view on any changes in genetic diversity across time and space. Long-read sequencing has tremendous potential but sequencing success strongly depends on the long-range integrity of DNA molecules and therefore on the availability of high-quality tissue samples. With the scope of genomic experiments expanding and wild populations simultaneously disappearing at an unprecedented rate, access to high-quality samples may soon be a major concern for many projects. The need for high-quality biodiversity tissue archives is therefore urgent but sampling and preserving high-quality samples is not a trivial exercise. In this review, I will briefly outline how long-read sequencing can benefit the study of molecular ecology, how this will substantially increase the demand for high-quality tissues and why it is challenging to preserve DNA integrity. I will then provide an overview of preservation approaches and end with a call for support to acknowledge the efforts needed to assemble high-quality tissue archives. In doing so, I hope to simultaneously motivate field biologists to expand sampling practices and molecular biologists to develop (cost) efficient guidelines for the sampling and long-term storage of tissues. A concerted, interdisciplinary, effort is needed to catalogue the genetic variation underlying contemporary biodiversity and will eventually provide a critical resource for future studies.

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