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Identification of plastic-associated species in the Mediterranean Sea using DNA metabarcoding with Nanopore MinION

Scientific Reports 2020 101 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Maxim Rubin‐Blum, Keren Davidov, Keren Davidov, Keren Davidov, Keren Davidov, Keren Davidov, Keren Davidov, Maxim Rubin‐Blum, Keren Davidov, Yuri Koucherov, Yuri Koucherov, Evgenia Iankelevich-Kounio, Keren Davidov, Yuri Koucherov, Yuri Koucherov, Evgenia Iankelevich-Kounio, Keren Davidov, Yuri Koucherov, Keren Davidov, Matan Oren Yuri Koucherov, Keren Davidov, Keren Davidov, Iryna Yakovenko, Maxim Rubin‐Blum, Yuri Koucherov, Keren Davidov, Yuri Koucherov, Evgenia Iankelevich-Kounio, Evgenia Iankelevich-Kounio, Keren Davidov, Evgenia Iankelevich-Kounio, Maxim Rubin‐Blum, Maxim Rubin‐Blum, Iryna Yakovenko, Matan Oren Matan Oren Matan Oren Matan Oren Matan Oren Matan Oren

Summary

Researchers used DNA metabarcoding with Oxford Nanopore MinION sequencing of extended barcode regions to characterise the plastisphere microbiome on polyethylene food bags after one month at sea in the Mediterranean, comparing it to the free-living biome at two environmentally distinct coastal sites in Israel. The study identified plastic-associated bacterial and eukaryotic species distinct from surrounding water communities.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Plastic debris in the ocean form a new ecosystem, termed 'plastisphere', which hosts a variety of marine organisms. Recent studies implemented DNA metabarcoding to characterize the taxonomic composition of the plastisphere in different areas of the world. In this study, we used a modified metabarcoding approach which was based on longer barcode sequences for the characterization of the plastisphere biota. We compared the microbiome of polyethylene food bags after 1 month at sea to the free-living biome in two proximal but environmentally different locations on the Mediterranean coast of Israel. We targeted the full 1.5 kb-long 16S rRNA gene for bacteria and 0.4-0.8 kb-long regions within the 18S rRNA, ITS, tufA and COI loci for eukaryotes. The taxonomic barcodes were sequenced using Oxford Nanopore Technology with multiplexing on a single MinION flow cell. We identified between 1249 and 2141 species in each of the plastic samples, of which 61 species (34 bacteria and 27 eukaryotes) were categorized as plastic-specific, including species that belong to known hydrocarbon-degrading genera. In addition to a large prokaryotes repertoire, our results, supported by scanning electron microscopy, depict a surprisingly high biodiversity of eukaryotes within the plastisphere with a dominant presence of diatoms as well as other protists, algae and fungi.

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