1. Viral Diversity in Benthic Abyssal Ecosystems: Ecological and Methodological Considerations.
- Author
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Rosani, Umberto, Corinaldesi, Cinzia, Luongo, Gabriella, Sollitto, Marco, Dal Monego, Simeone, Licastro, Danilo, Bongiorni, Lucia, Venier, Paola, Pallavicini, Alberto, and Dell'Anno, Antonio
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SHOTGUNS , *DNA , *OCEAN , *SINGLE-stranded DNA , *ECOSYSTEMS , *FAMILIES - Abstract
Viruses are the most abundant 'biological entities' in the world's oceans. However, technical and methodological constraints limit our understanding of their diversity, particularly in benthic abyssal ecosystems (>4000 m depth). To verify advantages and limitations of analyzing virome DNA subjected either to random amplification or unamplified, we applied shotgun sequencing-by-synthesis to two sample pairs obtained from benthic abyssal sites located in the North-eastern Atlantic Ocean at ca. 4700 m depth. One amplified DNA sample was also subjected to single-molecule long-read sequencing for comparative purposes. Overall, we identified 24,828 viral Operational Taxonomic Units (vOTUs), belonging to 22 viral families. Viral reads were more abundant in the amplified DNA samples (38.5–49.9%) compared to the unamplified ones (4.4–5.8%), with the latter showing a greater viral diversity and 11–16% of dsDNA viruses almost undetectable in the amplified samples. From a procedural point of view, the viromes obtained by direct sequencing (without amplification step) provided a broader overview of both ss and dsDNA viral diversity. Nevertheless, our results suggest that the contextual use of random amplification of the same sample and long-read technology can improve the assessment of viral assemblages by reducing off-target reads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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