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Lost biodiversity in the genomic age: contributions from historical DNA to the systematics of rare and extinct frogs

Grant number: 22/02789-0
Support Opportunities:Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate (Direct)
Effective date (Start): August 01, 2022
Status:Discontinued
Field of knowledge:Biological Sciences - Zoology - Taxonomy of Recent Groups
Principal Investigator:Taran Grant
Grantee:Daniel Yudi Miyahara Nakamura
Host Institution: Instituto de Biociências (IB). Universidade de São Paulo (USP). São Paulo , SP, Brazil
Associated research grant:18/15425-0 - A multi-disciplinary approach to the study of amphibian diversification: phase 2, AP.JP2
Associated scholarship(s):24/03494-9 - Methodological advances in museomics and dynamic homology: Integrating assembly of historical DNA reads and tree-alignment, BE.EP.DD

Abstract

Amphibians are the most threatened group of vertebrates. As a result of its global decline, many species collected in the past are currently rare or even extinct. Although the so-called lost frogs are preserved in museums, they are usually ignored in molecular phylogenies due to the lack of fresh tissues to DNA sequencing. Owing to cumulative post-mortem damages (high fragmentation and contamination rates, low endogenous content, and base modifications such as cytosine deamination), historical DNA from formalin-fixed type specimens (hDNA) was hardly sequenced with PCR and Sanger sequencing. Recently, these limitations have been overcome using single-stranded DNA preparations, enzymatic treatments, clean laboratory, and Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) that generates millions of short reads, which are subsequently assembled in silico. Here we will use NGS (Illumina HiSeq) to sequence hDNA from partial nuclear and mitochondrial genomes of 60 species of neotropical lost frogs, including historical specimens of Centrolenidae, Dendrobatidae, Hylidae, Hylodidae, and Phyllomedusidae. We carefully selected these groups due to (I) the higher affordability in obtaining tissues of type specimens and (II) the potential to elucidate challenging problems of species identity and phylogenetic position of neotropical historical specimens never included in molecular phylogenies, which otherwise could not be performed only with phenomic data. This project will provide a large amount of molecular data from type specimens of rare and extinct frogs for the first time in Brazil, which is an innovative advance in amphibian systematics. (AU)

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