A universal method for species identification of mammals utilizing next generation sequencing for the analysis of DNA mixtures

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Abstract

Species identification can be interesting in a wide range of areas, for example, in forensic applications, food monitoring and in archeology. The vast majority of existing DNA typing methods developed for species determination, mainly focuses on a single species source. There are, however, many instances where all species from mixed sources need to be determined, even when the species in minority constitutes less than 1% of the sample. The introduction of next generation sequencing opens new possibilities for such challenging samples. In this study we present a universal deep sequencing method using 454 GS Junior sequencing of a target on the mitochondrial gene 16S rRNA. The method was designed through phylogenetic analyses of DNA reference sequences from more than 300 mammal species. Experiments were performed on artificial species-species mixture samples in order to verify the method's robustness and its ability to detect all species within a mixture. The method was also tested on samples from authentic forensic casework. The results showed to be promising, discriminating over 99.9% of mammal species and the ability to detect multiple donors within a mixture and also to detect minor components as low as 1% of a mixed sample. © 2013 Tillmar et al.

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Tillmar, A. O., Dell’Amico, B., Welander, J., & Holmlund, G. (2013). A universal method for species identification of mammals utilizing next generation sequencing for the analysis of DNA mixtures. PLoS ONE, 8(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083761

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