Towards a unified paradigm for sequence-based identification of Fungi

Urmas Kõljalg, Henrik Nilsson, Kessy Abarenkov, Leho Tedersoo, Andy FS Taylor, Mohammad Bahram, Scott T. Bates, Thomas D. Bruns, Johan Bengtsson-Palme, Tony Martin Callaghan, Brian Douglas, Tiia Drenkhan, Ursula Eberhardt, Margarita Dueñas, Tine Grebenc, Gareth W. Griffith, Martin Hartmann, Paul M. Kirk, Petr Kohout, Ellen LarssonBjörn D. Lindahl, Robert Lücking, María P. Martín, P. Brandon Matheny, Nhu H. Nguyen, Tuula Niskanen, Jane Oja, Kabir G. Peay, Ursula Peintner, Marko Peterson, Kadri Põldmaa, Lauri Saag, Irja Saar, Arthur Schüßler, James A. Scott, Carolina Senés, Matthew E. Smith, Ave Suija, D. Lee Taylor, M. Teresa Telleria, Michael Weiß, Karl-Henrik Larsson

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

    Abstract

    The nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region is the formal fungal barcode and in most cases the marker of choice for exploration of fungal diversity in environmental samples. Two problems are particularly acute in the pursuit of satisfactory taxonomic assignment of newly generated ITS sequences: (i) the lack of an inclusive, reliable public reference dataset, and (ii) the lack of means to refer to fungal species, for which no Latin name is available in a standardized stable way. Here we report on progress in these regards through further development of the UNITE database (http://unite.ut.ee) for molecular identification of fungi. All fungal species represented by at least two ITS sequences in the international nucleotide sequence databases are now given a unique, stable name of the accession number type (e.g., Hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus|GU586904|SH133781.05FU), and their taxonomic and ecological annotations were corrected as far as possible through a distributed, third-party annotation effort. We introduce the term “species hypothesis” (SH) for the taxa discovered in clustering on different similarity tresholds (97-99%). An automatically or manually designated sequence is chosen to represent each such species hypothesis. These reference sequences are released (http://unite.ut.ee/repository.php) for use by the scientific community in, e.g., local sequence similarity searches and in the QIIME pipeline. The system and the data will be updated automatically as the number of public fungal ITS sequences grows. We invite everybody in the position to improve the annotation or metadata associated with their particular fungal lineages of expertise to do so through the new web-based sequence management system in UNITE.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalMolecular Ecology
    Volume22
    Issue number21
    Pages (from-to)5271-5277
    Number of pages7
    ISSN0962-1083
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013
    MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

    Fields of Science

    • 1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology

    Cite this