2007
DOI: 10.3354/meps06891
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In situ hybridization on whole larvae: a novel method for monitoring bivalve larvae

Abstract: Accurate and efficient identification to the species level of early larval stages has long been a problematic step in the study of marine invertebrates, due to the extremely small size of the larvae and their lack of diagnostic morphological characters. It is nonetheless, a prerequisite for any ecological study. As a consequence, a number of molecular approaches, mostly based on the PCR technique, have been developed over the last decade. We developed a method relying on specific rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide … Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…In situ hybridization protocols typically target 16S (prokaryotes) or 18S (eukaryotes) small subunit rRNA (ssu rRNA), as it is abundant in cells, is variable at genus or species levels for many taxa, and is an appropriate target for FISH probes for bivalves (Pernthaler et al 2001, Le Goff-Vitry et al 2007a and references therein). Probes were designed for 2 bivalve taxa, the Mytilus edulis/galloprovincialis/ trossulus species complex, and Musculista senhousia, targeting the 18S ssu rRNA.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In situ hybridization protocols typically target 16S (prokaryotes) or 18S (eukaryotes) small subunit rRNA (ssu rRNA), as it is abundant in cells, is variable at genus or species levels for many taxa, and is an appropriate target for FISH probes for bivalves (Pernthaler et al 2001, Le Goff-Vitry et al 2007a and references therein). Probes were designed for 2 bivalve taxa, the Mytilus edulis/galloprovincialis/ trossulus species complex, and Musculista senhousia, targeting the 18S ssu rRNA.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our current method targets 18S ssu rRNA, the same target widely used in similar FISH cell-sorting techniques for identifying such taxa as marine bacteria (where the prokaryotic ssu rRNA, 16S, is the target; Pernthaler et al 2001) and other marine invertebrates (Goffredi et al 2006, Le Goff-Vitry et al 2007a. While in many taxa a short oligonucleotide probe targeting 18S can differentiate species, in other groups 18S is not variable enough to allow for more than a single base pair difference between species in a ~20 base pair oligonucleotide probe.…”
Section: Probe Gene Targetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Investigating dispersal patterns of bivalve hosts is problematic. Early larvae and dispersal stages of chemosymbiotic bivalves are difficult to identify in the water column, despite various methodologies based on diagnostic PCR, or in situ hybridization of larvae using specific probes having been developed Le Goff-Vitry et al, 2007;Pradillon et al, 2007). Consequently, the distributions of larvae and their positioning in the water masses are not known.…”
Section: Reproduction Development and Dispersal Strategies Of Hostsmentioning
confidence: 99%