sequencing chemistry
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Somesh Kumar ◽  
Avinash Lomash ◽  
Mohammed Faruq ◽  
Oves Siddiqui ◽  
Suresh Kumar ◽  
...  

SARS-CoV-2 infection has been playing havoc with emerging omicron variants of concern (VoC). Here, we report sequencing of the omicron variant in 13 patients from India using Oxford Nanopore Technology (ONT) Minion, wherein a rapid amplicon based sequence analysis was performed to assess and compare with existing 34 mutations in spike glycoprotein. We highlight and discuss the nature of these mutations that are unique and common to other populations. This is perhaps the first report on omicron variants from India using a long read sequencing chemistry.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongping Li ◽  
Tobias Fehlmann ◽  
Adam Borcherding ◽  
Snezana Drmanac ◽  
Sophie Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Results of massive parallel sequencing-by-synthesis vary depending on the sequencing approach. CoolMPS™ is a new sequencing chemistry that incorporates bases by labeled antibodies. To evaluate the performance, we sequenced 240 human non-coding RNA samples (dementia patients and controls) with and without CoolMPS. The Q30 value as indicator of the per base sequencing quality increased from 91.8 to 94%. The higher quality was reached across the whole read length. Likewise, the percentage of reads mapping to the human genome increased from 84.9 to 86.2%. For both technologies, we computed similar distributions between different RNA classes (miRNA, piRNA, tRNA, snoRNA and yRNA) and within the classes. While standard sequencing-by-synthesis allowed to recover more annotated miRNAs, CoolMPS yielded more novel miRNAs. The correlation between the two methods was 0.97. Evaluating the diagnostic performance, we observed lower minimal P-values for CoolMPS (adjusted P-value of 0.0006 versus 0.0004) and larger effect sizes (Cohen's d of 0.878 versus 0.9). Validating 19 miRNAs resulted in a correlation of 0.852 between CoolMPS and reverse transcriptase-quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Comparison to data generated with Illumina technology confirmed a known shift in the overall RNA composition. With CoolMPS we evaluated a novel sequencing-by-synthesis technology showing high performance for the analysis of non-coding RNAs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wai Sing Chan ◽  
Chun Hang Au ◽  
Yvonne Chung ◽  
Henry Chi Ming Leung ◽  
Dona N. Ho ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective We designed and tested a Nanopore sequencing panel for direct tuberculosis drug resistance profiling. The panel targeted 10 resistance-associated loci. We assessed the feasibility of amplifying and sequencing these loci from 23 clinical specimens with low bacillary burden. Results At least 8 loci were successfully amplified from the majority for predicting first- and second-line drug resistance (14/23, 60.87%), and the 12 specimens yielding all 10 targets were sequenced with Nanopore MinION and Illumina MiSeq. MinION sequencing data was corrected by Nanopolish and recurrent variants were filtered. A total of 67,082 bases across all consensus sequences were analyzed, with 67,019 bases called by both MinION and MiSeq as wildtype. For the 41 single nucleotide variants (SNVs) called by MiSeq with 100% variant allelic frequency (VAF), 39 (95.1%) were called by MinION. For the 22 mixed bases called by MiSeq, a SNV with the highest VAF (70%) was called by MinION. With short assay time, reasonable reagent cost as well as continuously improving sequencing chemistry and signal correction pipelines, this Nanopore method can be a viable option for direct tuberculosis drug resistance profiling in the near future.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenxiong Zhou ◽  
Li Kang ◽  
Haifeng Duan ◽  
Shuo Qiao ◽  
Louis Tao ◽  
...  

Abstract An error-correction code (ECC) sequencing approach has recently been reported to effectively reduce sequencing errors by interrogating a DNA fragment with three orthogonal degenerate sequencing-by-synthesis (SBS) reactions. However, similar to other non-single-molecule SBS methods, the reaction will gradually lose its synchronization within a molecular colony in ECC sequencing. This phenomenon, called dephasing, causes sequencing error, and in ECC sequencing, induces distinctive dephasing patterns. To understand the characteristic dephasing patterns of the dual-base flowgram in ECC sequencing and to generate a correction algorithm, we built a virtual sequencer in silico. Starting from first principles and based on sequencing chemical reactions, we simulated ECC sequencing results, identified the key factors of dephasing in ECC sequencing chemistry, and designed an effective dephasing algorithm. The results show that our dephasing algorithm is applicable to sequencing signals with at least 500 cycles, or 1,000-bp average read length, with acceptably low error rate for further parity-checks and ECC deduction. Our virtual sequencer with our dephasing algorithm can further be extended to a dichromatic form of ECC sequencing, allowing for a potentially much more accurate sequencing approach.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (13) ◽  
pp. 4636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Antonelli ◽  
Alfonso Esposito ◽  
Giulia Galotta ◽  
Barbara Davidde Petriaggi ◽  
Silvano Piazza ◽  
...  

Waterlogged archaeological wood (WAW) is considered a precious material, first-hand account of past civilizations. Like any organic material, it is subjected to biodegradative action of microorganisms whose activity could be particularly fast and dangerous during the phases of excavation, storage and restoration. The present work aimed to characterize the microorganisms present in WAW during these tricky periods to evaluate the biological risk it is exposed to. The bacterial and fungal communities inhabiting woods coming from two archaeological sites (Pisa and Naples) were investigated through Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS). High-throughput sequencing of extracted DNA fragments was performed using the reversible terminator-based sequencing chemistry with the Illumina MiSeq platform. The analyses revealed that the two archaeological sites showed distinct richness and biodiversity, as expected. In all the WAWs, the bacterial community harbored mainly Proteobacteria, whereas Bacteroidetes was well represented only in Naples communities and taxa belonging to the phyla Chloroflexi only in the Pisa site. Concerning the fungal community, the two sites were dominated by different phyla: Ascomycota for Naples samples and Basidiomycota for Pisa. Interestingly, most of the identified bacterial and fungal taxa have cellulolytic or ligninolytic ability. These results provide new and useful background information concerning the composition of WAW microbiota and the threat it represents for this precious material.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Fürth ◽  
Victor Hatini ◽  
Je H. Lee

Subcellular RNA localization regulates spatially polarized cellular processes, but unbiased investigation of its control in vivo remains challenging. Current hybridization-based methods cannot differentiate small regulatory variants, while in situ sequencing is limited by short reads. We solved these problems using a bidirectional sequencing chemistry to efficiently image transcript-specific barcode in situ, which are then extracted and assembled into longer reads using NGS. In the Drosophila retina, genes regulating eye development and cytoskeletal organization were enriched compared to methods using extracted RNA. We therefore named our method In Situ Transcriptome Accessibility sequencing (INSTA-seq). Sequencing reads terminated near 3’ UTR cis-motifs (e.g. Zip48C, stau), revealing RNA-protein interactions. Additionally, Act5C polyadenylation isoforms retaining zipcode motifs were selectively localized to the optical stalk, consistent with their biology. Our platform provides a powerful way to visualize any RNA variants or protein interactions in situ to study their regulation in animal development.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (20) ◽  
Author(s):  
Narendra Meena ◽  
M. Vasundhara ◽  
M. Sudhakara Reddy ◽  
Prashanth Suravajhala ◽  
U. S. Raghavender ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Here, we report the draft de novo genome sequence assembly of Fusarium tricinctum (strain T6), using IonTorrent sequencing chemistry and an Ion 530 chip ExT kit for sequencing. The genome assembly resulted in 42,732,204 bp from a total 6.62 Gb, with a median read length of 386 bp.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyin Chen ◽  
Yu-Chi Sun ◽  
George M Church ◽  
Je Hyuk Lee ◽  
Anthony M Zador

AbstractCellular DNA/RNA tags (barcodes) allow for multiplexed cell lineage tracing and neuronal projection mapping with cellular resolution. Conventional approaches to reading out cellular barcodes trade off spatial resolution with throughput. Bulk sequencing achieves high throughput but sacrifices spatial resolution, whereas manual cell picking has low throughput. In situ sequencing could potentially achieve both high spatial resolution and high throughput, but current in situ sequencing techniques are inefficient at reading out cellular barcodes. Here we describe BaristaSeq, an optimization of a targeted, padlock probe-based technique for in situ barcode sequencing compatible with Illumina sequencing chemistry. BaristaSeq results in a five-fold increase in amplification efficiency, with a sequencing accuracy of at least 97%. BaristaSeq could be used for barcode-assisted lineage tracing, and to map long-range neuronal projections.Key PointsIn situ sequencing by gap-filling padlock probes is limited by the strand displacement of DNA polymerasesIllumina sequencing chemistry offers superior signal-to-noise ratio in situ compared to sequencing by ligationBaristaSeq as an accurate method for barcode sequencing in situ with improved gap-filling efficiency


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