DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species

Abstract Background Sequence divergence in mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I genes (COI) has been used as an efficient forensic tool in solving wildlife-related problems and also be used in molecular taxonomy for species identification. Methods This study presents the DNA barcode sequence...

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Main Authors: Vikas Kumar, Neelkamal Sharma, Arun Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-12-01
Series:Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences
Subjects:
COI
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41935-017-0034-6
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spelling doaj-41a1259504b04786bcc0e84d440870472020-11-24T21:20:08ZengSpringerOpenEgyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences2090-59392017-12-01711710.1186/s41935-017-0034-6DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related speciesVikas Kumar0Neelkamal Sharma1Arun Sharma2Department of Genetics, Maharshi Dayanand UniversityDepartment of Genetics, Maharshi Dayanand UniversityState Forensic Science Laboratory, Himachal PradeshAbstract Background Sequence divergence in mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I genes (COI) has been used as an efficient forensic tool in solving wildlife-related problems and also be used in molecular taxonomy for species identification. Methods This study presents the DNA barcode sequences of the Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) from Haryana, India. A dataset of 43 partial COI sequences of 13 species belonging to 4 genus of Antilopinae sub- family were used for molecular analysis and to construct the phylogenetic tree to elucidate the species diversity among sub-family Anitlopinae. The data comprised of generated sequences of the Blackbuck (n = 22) and with additional COI sequences of the related species (n = 21) showing maximum homology with Blackbuck COI sequence were downloaded from NCBI-GenBank for wide coverage of inter and intra-specific nucleotide diversity. Results Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the studied COI region provided accurate species clustering showing their importance in wildlife species identification. The intra-specific sequence divergence of all the studied Antilopinae species was observed 0.47% (<1%). Specifically in the studied genus- Antilope, it was observed 0.3%. Whereas the interspecific divergence was in the range of 0.3–12.6% among 13 species from 4 genus. The highest interspecific divergence was observed among Antilope cervicapra and Gazella erlangeri (12.6%). Conclusion The developed species-specific barcoding (COI) sequence of Indian Blackbuck from Haryana, India, demonstrated their high potential to identify Blackbuck from their sympatric species in wildlife-related crimes and in conservation activities. Published Barcode sequences in the both database serve as a wildlife forensic tool to solve Blackbuck related crimes. This study supports the credibility of DNA Barcoding in forensic investigation and wildlife conservation and also emphasized the need for species barcode database from each country to assist in solving wildlife related offenses.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41935-017-0034-6Sequence divergenceDNA barcodeForensicWildlife-related problemsCOIAntilope cervicapra
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vikas Kumar
Neelkamal Sharma
Arun Sharma
spellingShingle Vikas Kumar
Neelkamal Sharma
Arun Sharma
DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences
Sequence divergence
DNA barcode
Forensic
Wildlife-related problems
COI
Antilope cervicapra
author_facet Vikas Kumar
Neelkamal Sharma
Arun Sharma
author_sort Vikas Kumar
title DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
title_short DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
title_full DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
title_fullStr DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
title_full_unstemmed DNA barcoding of the Indian blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
title_sort dna barcoding of the indian blackbuck (antilope cervicapra) and their correlation with other closely related species
publisher SpringerOpen
series Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences
issn 2090-5939
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Background Sequence divergence in mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I genes (COI) has been used as an efficient forensic tool in solving wildlife-related problems and also be used in molecular taxonomy for species identification. Methods This study presents the DNA barcode sequences of the Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) from Haryana, India. A dataset of 43 partial COI sequences of 13 species belonging to 4 genus of Antilopinae sub- family were used for molecular analysis and to construct the phylogenetic tree to elucidate the species diversity among sub-family Anitlopinae. The data comprised of generated sequences of the Blackbuck (n = 22) and with additional COI sequences of the related species (n = 21) showing maximum homology with Blackbuck COI sequence were downloaded from NCBI-GenBank for wide coverage of inter and intra-specific nucleotide diversity. Results Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the studied COI region provided accurate species clustering showing their importance in wildlife species identification. The intra-specific sequence divergence of all the studied Antilopinae species was observed 0.47% (<1%). Specifically in the studied genus- Antilope, it was observed 0.3%. Whereas the interspecific divergence was in the range of 0.3–12.6% among 13 species from 4 genus. The highest interspecific divergence was observed among Antilope cervicapra and Gazella erlangeri (12.6%). Conclusion The developed species-specific barcoding (COI) sequence of Indian Blackbuck from Haryana, India, demonstrated their high potential to identify Blackbuck from their sympatric species in wildlife-related crimes and in conservation activities. Published Barcode sequences in the both database serve as a wildlife forensic tool to solve Blackbuck related crimes. This study supports the credibility of DNA Barcoding in forensic investigation and wildlife conservation and also emphasized the need for species barcode database from each country to assist in solving wildlife related offenses.
topic Sequence divergence
DNA barcode
Forensic
Wildlife-related problems
COI
Antilope cervicapra
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41935-017-0034-6
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