Data from: Identification of Swedish mosquitoes based on molecular barcoding of the COI gene and SNP analysis

5P_COI_MSA3P_COI_MSAMosquito_COI Mosquito-borne infectious diseases are emerging in many regions of the world. Consequently, surveillance of mosquitoes and concomitant infectious agents is of great importance for prediction and prevention of mosquito-borne infectious diseases. Currently, morphologic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Engdahl, Cecilia, Larsson, Pär, Näslund, Jonas, Bravo, Mayra, Evander, Magnus, Lundstrom, Jan O., Ahlm, Clas, Bucht, Göran
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.qb4gs
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Summary:5P_COI_MSA3P_COI_MSAMosquito_COI Mosquito-borne infectious diseases are emerging in many regions of the world. Consequently, surveillance of mosquitoes and concomitant infectious agents is of great importance for prediction and prevention of mosquito-borne infectious diseases. Currently, morphological identification of mosquitoes is the traditional procedure. However, sequencing of specified genes or standard genomic regions, DNA barcoding, has recently been suggested as a global standard for identification and classification of many different species. Our aim was to develop a genetic method to identify mosquitoes and to study their relationship. Mosquitoes were captured at collection sites in northern Sweden and identified morphologically before the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene sequences of 14 of the most common mosquito species were determined. The sequences obtained were then used for phylogenetic placement, for validation and benchmarking of phenetic classifications, and finally to develop a hierarchical PCR-based typing scheme based on single nucleotide polymorphism sites (SNPs) to enable rapid genetic identification, circumventing the need for morphological characterization. The results showed that exact phylogenetic relationships between mosquito taxa were preserved at shorter evolutionary distances, but at deeper levels they could not be inferred with confidence by using COI gene sequence data alone. Fourteen of the most common mosquito species in Sweden were identified by the SNP/PCR-based typing scheme, demonstrating that genetic typing using SNPs of the COI gene is a useful method for identification of mosquitoes with potential for worldwide application.