Title: Folie 1
1Fish and Chips microarray-based DNA-barcoding of
European Marine Fishes Kochzius M1, Antoniou
A2, Botla S1, Campo Falgueras D3, Garcia Vazquez
E3, Hauschild J1, Hervet C4, Hjörleifsdottir S5,
Hreggvidsson G5, Kappel K1, Landi M6, Magoulas
A2, Marteinsson V5, Nölte M7, Planes S4, Seidel
C1, Silkenbeumer N1, Tinti F6, Turan C8,
Venugopal MN9, Weber H1, Blohm D1 1Centre for
Applied Gene Sensor Technology (CAG), University
of Bremen, Germany 2Institute of Marine Biology
and Genetics, Hellenic Centre for Marine
Research, Greece 3Universidad de Oviedo,
Spain 4Université de Perpignan, France 5Prokaria,
Iceland 6University of Bologna, Italy 7Zentrum
für Technomathematik (ZeTeM), University of
Bremen, Germany 8Mustafa Kemal University,
Turkey 9College of Fisheries, Mangalore, India
2Environmental problems, biodiversity, and
ecosystem functioning in European Seas
- Biodiversity and ecosystems of European Seas are
under anthropogenic induced pressure, such as
pollution, eutrophication, coastal construction,
and fishery overexploitation - Compared to terrestrial ecosystems very little is
known about marine biodiversity and changes in
species richness and ecosystem function - This is mainly due to sampling difficulties and
problems in taxonomy - There are only few scientific specialists for
several groups of marine organisms, including
phytoplankton, invertebrates, as well as eggs and
larvae of fishes
3DNA chips as a new tool for marine species
identification in biodiversity and ecosystem
research
- DNA-based identification methods are established
as powerful tools and the following marine
animals have been investigated (1) eggs,
larvae and adults of fishes (2) planktonic
copepods (3) invertebrate larvae
(4) prey in gut content or faeces of penguins,
whales, and fishes - most of these methods allow to handle only single
or a few species at the same time - DNA microarrays are believed to have the
potential of identifying hundreds of species in
parallel and to differentiate them against an
even larger number of related species.
4The principle of DNA chips (microarrays)
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Probes
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Surface of the DNA Chip
5The principle of DNA chips (microarrays)
Microarray (glass slide) hundreds of spots with
probes
Spots of probes with different signal intensities
after scanning with a fluorescence scanner
6Sampling, sequencing, and probe design
- Sampling all European Seas
- Sequencing of partial mtDNA genes
- COI 532 sequences, 66 species
- cyt b 434 sequences, 41 species
- 16S 479 sequences, 79 species
- Probe design
- COI 455 bp, 470 sequences, 47 species
- cyt b 404 bp, 281 Sequences, 43 species
- 16S 418-452 bp, 404 sequences, 46 species
- In silico testing against several hundred
background sequences from sequence data bases
7Probe design (www.miconet.uni-bremen.de)
- Considered parameters in the design of
oligonucleotide libraries - Standard features, such as length, Tm, GC content
- Sensitivity and specificity
- Secondary structure of the DNA capture-molecules
- Avoidance of cross hybridisation
- Hybridisation efficiency
- Secondary structure of target molecules
8Layout of the microarry
COI (150)
Block
cyt b (123)
Array
16S (46)
Microarray
9Hybridisation experiments
Psetta maxima (16S)
Psetta maxima (COI)
Psetta maxima (cyt b)
10DNA microarray experiments experiments
Targets
16S (34)
COI (42)
cyt b (42)
16S (46)
Signals
true positive
COI (150)
Probes
missing true positive
cyt b (123)
false positive
11DNA microarray experiments
- 16S strong true-positive signals only a few
false-positive signals - COI strong true-positive signals many
false-positive signals - cyt b weak true-positive signals, many missing
false-positive signals
12DNA microarray experiments (16S)
Kochzius et al., submitted
13Conclusions
- A single marker system seems to be not sufficient
to design oligonucleotide probes for DNA
microarrays - Therefore, it is recommended to utilise several
markers for the genetic identification of fishes
with DNA microarrays - Nevertheless, identification of fishes is
possible with DNA microarrays, but probes have to
be tested intensively in hybridisation experiments
14Srujana Chitipothu et al. (poster) Towards
microarray-based DNA-barcoding of marine
invertebrates
15Acknowledgement The Fish Chips project is a
Specific Targeted Research Project (STREP) funded
by the European Commission under the contract no.
505491
16Thank you very much for your attention!