7 results on '"Akeson M"'
Search Results
2. Direct Nanopore Sequencing of Individual Full Length tRNA Strands.
- Author
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Thomas NK, Poodari VC, Jain M, Olsen HE, Akeson M, and Abu-Shumays RL
- Subjects
- Escherichia coli genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Nucleotides, Nanopore Sequencing, Nanopores
- Abstract
We describe a method for direct tRNA sequencing using the Oxford Nanopore MinION. The principal technical advance is custom adapters that facilitate end-to-end sequencing of individual transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules at subnanometer precision. A second advance is a nanopore sequencing pipeline optimized for tRNA. We tested this method using purified E. coli tRNA
fMet , tRNALys , and tRNAPhe samples. 76-92% of individual aligned tRNA sequence reads were full length. As a proof of concept, we showed that nanopore sequencing detected all 43 expected isoacceptors in total E. coli MRE600 tRNA as well as isodecoders that further define that tRNA population. Alignment-based comparisons between the three purified tRNAs and their synthetic controls revealed systematic nucleotide miscalls that were diagnostic of known modifications. Systematic miscalls were also observed proximal to known modifications in total E. coli tRNA alignments, including a highly conserved pseudouridine in the T loop. This work highlights the potential of nanopore direct tRNA sequencing as well as improvements needed to implement tRNA sequencing for human healthcare applications.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Real-Time Culture-Independent Microbial Profiling Onboard the International Space Station Using Nanopore Sequencing.
- Author
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Stahl-Rommel S, Jain M, Nguyen HN, Arnold RR, Aunon-Chancellor SM, Sharp GM, Castro CL, John KK, Juul S, Turner DJ, Stoddart D, Paten B, Akeson M, Burton AS, and Castro-Wallace SL
- Subjects
- Humans, Bacteria genetics, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Nanopore Sequencing, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Spacecraft, Specimen Handling
- Abstract
For the past two decades, microbial monitoring of the International Space Station (ISS) has relied on culture-dependent methods that require return to Earth for analysis. This has a number of limitations, with the most significant being bias towards the detection of culturable organisms and the inherent delay between sample collection and ground-based analysis. In recent years, portable and easy-to-use molecular-based tools, such as Oxford Nanopore Technologies' MinION™ sequencer and miniPCR bio's miniPCR™ thermal cycler, have been validated onboard the ISS. Here, we report on the development, validation, and implementation of a swab-to-sequencer method that provides a culture-independent solution to real-time microbial profiling onboard the ISS. Method development focused on analysis of swabs collected in a low-biomass environment with limited facility resources and stringent controls on allowed processes and reagents. ISS-optimized procedures included enzymatic DNA extraction from a swab tip, bead-based purifications, altered buffers, and the use of miniPCR and the MinION. Validation was conducted through extensive ground-based assessments comparing current standard culture-dependent and newly developed culture-independent methods. Similar microbial distributions were observed between the two methods; however, as expected, the culture-independent data revealed microbial profiles with greater diversity. Protocol optimization and verification was established during NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO) analog missions 21 and 22, respectively. Unique microbial profiles obtained from analog testing validated the swab-to-sequencer method in an extreme environment. Finally, four independent swab-to-sequencer experiments were conducted onboard the ISS by two crewmembers. Microorganisms identified from ISS swabs were consistent with historical culture-based data, and primarily consisted of commonly observed human-associated microbes. This simplified method has been streamlined for high ease-of-use for a non-trained crew to complete in an extreme environment, thereby enabling environmental and human health diagnostics in real-time as future missions take us beyond low-Earth orbit.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Adaptation of Human Ribosomal RNA for Nanopore Sequencing of Canonical and Modified Nucleotides.
- Author
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Jain M, Olsen HE, Akeson M, and Abu-Shumays R
- Subjects
- Humans, Nanopores, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Nanopore Sequencing methods, Nucleotides genetics, RNA, Ribosomal genetics, Sequence Analysis, RNA methods
- Abstract
Historically, RNA has been sequenced as cDNA copies derived from reverse transcription of cellular RNA followed by PCR amplification. Recently, RNA sequencing using nanopores has emerged as an alternative. Using this technology, individual cellular RNA strands are read directly as they are driven through nanoscale pores by an applied voltage. The speed of translocation is regulated by a helicase that is loaded onto each RNA strand by an adapter that also facilitates capture by the nanopore electric field. Here we describe a technique for adapting human ribosomal RNA subunits for nanopore sequencing. Using this strategy, a single Oxford Nanopore MinION run delivered 470,907 sequence reads of which 396,048 aligned to ribosomal RNA, with 28S, 18S, 5.8S, and 5S coverage of 6053, 369,472, 16,058, and 4465 reads, respectively. Example alignments that reveal putative nucleotide modifications are provided.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Nanopore sequencing and the Shasta toolkit enable efficient de novo assembly of eleven human genomes.
- Author
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Shafin K, Pesout T, Lorig-Roach R, Haukness M, Olsen HE, Bosworth C, Armstrong J, Tigyi K, Maurer N, Koren S, Sedlazeck FJ, Marschall T, Mayes S, Costa V, Zook JM, Liu KJ, Kilburn D, Sorensen M, Munson KM, Vollger MR, Monlong J, Garrison E, Eichler EE, Salama S, Haussler D, Green RE, Akeson M, Phillippy A, Miga KH, Carnevali P, Jain M, and Paten B
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Benchmarking, Chromosomes, Human genetics, Deep Learning, Genomics, HLA Antigens genetics, Haploidy, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing standards, Humans, Sequence Analysis, DNA standards, Genome, Human genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Nanopore Sequencing, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods
- Abstract
De novo assembly of a human genome using nanopore long-read sequences has been reported, but it used more than 150,000 CPU hours and weeks of wall-clock time. To enable rapid human genome assembly, we present Shasta, a de novo long-read assembler, and polishing algorithms named MarginPolish and HELEN. Using a single PromethION nanopore sequencer and our toolkit, we assembled 11 highly contiguous human genomes de novo in 9 d. We achieved roughly 63× coverage, 42-kb read N50 values and 6.5× coverage in reads >100 kb using three flow cells per sample. Shasta produced a complete haploid human genome assembly in under 6 h on a single commercial compute node. MarginPolish and HELEN polished haploid assemblies to more than 99.9% identity (Phred quality score QV = 30) with nanopore reads alone. Addition of proximity-ligation sequencing enabled near chromosome-level scaffolds for all 11 genomes. We compare our assembly performance to existing methods for diploid, haploid and trio-binned human samples and report superior accuracy and speed.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Off Earth Identification of Bacterial Populations Using 16S rDNA Nanopore Sequencing.
- Author
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Burton AS, Stahl SE, John KK, Jain M, Juul S, Turner DJ, Harrington ED, Stoddart D, Paten B, Akeson M, and Castro-Wallace SL
- Subjects
- Bacteria genetics, DNA, Bacterial genetics, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, Exobiology methods, Extraterrestrial Environment, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Microbiota genetics, Nanopores, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Spacecraft instrumentation, Nanopore Sequencing methods, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Specimen Handling methods
- Abstract
The MinION sequencer has made in situ sequencing feasible in remote locations. Following our initial demonstration of its high performance off planet with Earth-prepared samples, we developed and tested an end-to-end, sample-to-sequencer process that could be conducted entirely aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Initial experiments demonstrated the process with a microbial mock community standard. The DNA was successfully amplified, primers were degraded, and libraries prepared and sequenced. The median percent identities for both datasets were 84%, as assessed from alignment of the mock community. The ability to correctly identify the organisms in the mock community standard was comparable for the sequencing data obtained in flight and on the ground. To validate the process on microbes collected from and cultured aboard the ISS, bacterial cells were selected from a NASA Environmental Health Systems Surface Sample Kit contact slide. The locations of bacterial colonies chosen for identification were labeled, and a small number of cells were directly added as input into the sequencing workflow. Prepared DNA was sequenced, and the data were downlinked to Earth. Return of the contact slide to the ground allowed for standard laboratory processing for bacterial identification. The identifications obtained aboard the ISS, Staphylococcus hominis and Staphylococcus capitis , matched those determined on the ground down to the species level. This marks the first ever identification of microbes entirely off Earth, and this validated process could be used for in-flight microbial identification, diagnosis of infectious disease in a crewmember, and as a research platform for investigators around the world.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Nanopore native RNA sequencing of a human poly(A) transcriptome.
- Author
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Workman RE, Tang AD, Tang PS, Jain M, Tyson JR, Razaghi R, Zuzarte PC, Gilpatrick T, Payne A, Quick J, Sadowski N, Holmes N, de Jesus JG, Jones KL, Soulette CM, Snutch TP, Loman N, Paten B, Loose M, Simpson JT, Olsen HE, Brooks AN, Akeson M, and Timp W
- Subjects
- Cells, Cultured, Humans, Nanopore Sequencing methods, Poly A genetics, Sequence Analysis, RNA methods, Transcriptome
- Abstract
High-throughput complementary DNA sequencing technologies have advanced our understanding of transcriptome complexity and regulation. However, these methods lose information contained in biological RNA because the copied reads are often short and modifications are not retained. We address these limitations using a native poly(A) RNA sequencing strategy developed by Oxford Nanopore Technologies. Our study generated 9.9 million aligned sequence reads for the human cell line GM12878, using thirty MinION flow cells at six institutions. These native RNA reads had a median length of 771 bases, and a maximum aligned length of over 21,000 bases. Mitochondrial poly(A) reads provided an internal measure of read-length quality. We combined these long nanopore reads with higher accuracy short-reads and annotated GM12878 promoter regions to identify 33,984 plausible RNA isoforms. We describe strategies for assessing 3' poly(A) tail length, base modifications and transcript haplotypes.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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