Sequence comparison of the eukaryotic ITS regions is widely used in
taxonomy and
molecular phylogeny because of several favorable properties: • It is routinely amplified thanks to its small size associated to the availability of highly conserved flanking sequences. • It is easy to detect even from small quantities of DNA due to the high copy number of the rRNA clusters. • It undergoes rapid
concerted evolution via unequal crossing-over and gene conversion. This promotes intra-genomic homogeneity of the repeat units, although high-throughput sequencing showed the occurrence of frequent variations within plant species. • It has a high degree of variation even between closely related species. This can be explained by the relatively low evolutionary pressure acting on such non-coding spacer sequences. For example, ITS markers have proven especially useful for elucidating phylogenetic relationships among the following taxa. ITS2 is known to be more conserved than ITS1 is. All ITS2 sequences share a common core of secondary structure, while ITS1 structures are only conserved in much smaller taxonomic units. Regardless of the scope of conservation, structure-assisted comparison can provide higher resolution and robustness.
Mycological barcoding The ITS region is the most widely sequenced DNA region in
molecular ecology of
fungi and has been recommended as the universal fungal
barcode sequence. It has typically been most useful for molecular systematics at the species to genus level, and even within species (e.g., to identify geographic races). Because of its higher degree of variation than other genic regions of rDNA (for example, small- and large-subunit rRNA), variation among individual rDNA repeats can sometimes be observed within both the ITS and IGS regions. In addition to the universal ITS1+ITS4 primers used by many labs, several taxon-specific primers have been described that allow selective amplification of fungal sequences (e.g., see Gardes & Bruns 1993 paper describing amplification of
basidiomycete ITS sequences from
mycorrhiza samples). Despite
shotgun sequencing methods becoming increasingly utilized in microbial sequencing, the low biomass of fungi in clinical samples make the ITS region amplification an area of ongoing research. == References ==