Selecting competent reverse transcription strategies to maximize
biodiversity recovery with eRNA metabarcoding
Abstract
Both environmental DNA (eDNA) and environmental RNA (eRNA) have widely
adopted for biodiversity assessment. While eDNA often persists longer in
environments, eRNA offers a more current view of biological activities.
In eRNA metabarcoding, extracted eRNA is reverse transcribed into
complementary DNA (cDNA) for metabarcoding. However, the efficacy of
various reverse transcription strategies has not been evaluated. Here we
compared the biodiversity recovery efficiency of three common reverse
transcription strategies: random priming with hexamers, oligo(dT)
priming, and taxa-specific priming using Mifish-U for fish in both high-
and low-biodiversity regions. Our results demonstrate that reverse
transcription strategies significantly impact biodiversity recovery.
Random hexamer priming consistently detected the highest number of taxa
in both low- and high-biodiversity regions. In low-biodiversity areas,
oligo(dT) performed comparably to random hexamers; however, in
high-biodiversity regions, random hexamers outperformed oligo(dT),
particularly in recovering rare taxa. While taxa-specific priming was
comparative to the other strategies for high-abundance taxa, it was less
effective for rare taxa, limiting its utility for comprehensive
biodiversity assessment. These differences are largely due to the
multiple binding sites for random hexamers compared to the fewer or
absent sites with oligo(dT) under high eRNA degradation. Combining
random hexamers and oligo(dT) significantly improved taxa recovery,
especially for low-abundance species, supporting its best practice in
eukaryotes. For prokaryotes or genes lacking polyadenylation, random
priming is favored over taxa- or gene-specific priming. Collectively,
these findings underscore the critical importance of selecting
appropriate reverse transcription strategies in eRNA metabarcoding, with
significant implications for effective biodiversity monitoring and
conservation efforts.