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Ultralow-input single-tube linked-read library method enables short-read second-generation sequencing systems to routinely generate highly accurate and economical long-range sequencing information

Authors :
Pedro Belda-Ferre
Long Pham
Yu Xia
Guoya Mo
Zhoutao Chen
Huu Che
Yong Wang
Justin P. Shaffer
Tan Phan
Vikas Bansal
Peter L. Chang
Devin Porter
Wu Tsai-Chin
Ming Lei
Rob Knight
Hao Tran
Greg Humphrey
Son Pham
Pavel A. Pevzner
Source :
Genome research, vol 30, iss 6, Genome Res
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2020.

Abstract

Long-range sequencing information is required for haplotype phasing, de novo assembly, and structural variation detection. Current long-read sequencing technologies can provide valuable long-range information but at a high cost with low accuracy and high DNA input requirements. We have developed a single-tube Transposase Enzyme Linked Long-read Sequencing (TELL-seq) technology, which enables a low-cost, high-accuracy, and high-throughput short-read second-generation sequencer to generate over 100 kb of long-range sequencing information with as little as 0.1 ng input material. In a PCR tube, millions of clonally barcoded beads are used to uniquely barcode long DNA molecules in an open bulk reaction without dilution and compartmentation. The barcoded linked-reads are used to successfully assemble genomes ranging from microbes to human. These linked-reads also generate megabase-long phased blocks and provide a cost-effective tool for detecting structural variants in a genome, which are important to identify compound heterozygosity in recessive Mendelian diseases and discover genetic drivers and diagnostic biomarkers in cancers.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome research, vol 30, iss 6, Genome Res
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....827a89395f2686e457eb7247a29dacb5