Antarctic Cyanobacteria Biodiversity Based on ITS and TrnL Sequencing and Its Ecological Implication

Antarctic cyanobacteria biodiversity was investigated by simultaneous sequencing of the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS flanked by partial 16S and 23S), and Chloroplast tRNALeu UAA intron (TrnL), exploring whether such morphotypes constitute distinct species and explaining their c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Open Journal of Ecology
Main Authors: Carla Micheli, Raffaella Paperi, Alessandro Belmonte, Pushparaj Benjamin, CIANCHI, Maria Rossella
Other Authors: Carla, Micheli, Cianchi, Maria Rossella, Raffaella, Paperi, Alessandro, Belmonte, Pushparaj, Benjamin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Scientific Research Publishing 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11573/568323
https://doi.org/10.4236/oje.2014.48039
http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=46467#.U4j3jnJ_shE
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Summary:Antarctic cyanobacteria biodiversity was investigated by simultaneous sequencing of the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS flanked by partial 16S and 23S), and Chloroplast tRNALeu UAA intron (TrnL), exploring whether such morphotypes constitute distinct species and explaining their current distribution. We identified Nostocales, Chrococcales and Oscillatoriales species, collected in different habitats (soil, algal mats, lake sediments, ice-water) after their growth in cultures. By comparative sequence analyses available in Genbank, our results proved to be mostly in agreement with both TrnL and ITS, in the identification of the strains, particularly for Nostocales. Although ITS demonstrated more usefully than TrnL did in identifying Oscillatoriales and Chroococcales, due to the frequent lack of the intron in these groups, our results lead us to support an independent phylogenetic dataset of ITS and TrnL (the latter based on conserved regions) producing not only concordant clusters but also a secondary structure. Specific assignments of the secondary structure evidenced by different cyanobacteria groups, especially the D1-D1’ region of ITS and the P6b region of TrnL. For the latter region, the sequences analyzed for Nostoc species could be divided into the two classes previously identified, on the basis of different heptanucleotide repeats in P6b