Abstract

Abstract Novel sequencing technologies permit the rapid production of large sequence data sets. These technologies are likely to revolutionize genetics and biomedical research, but a thorough characterization of the ultra-short read output is necessary. We generated and analyzed two Illumina 1G ultra-short read data sets, i.e. 2.8 million 27mer reads from a Beta vulgaris genomic clone and 12.3 million 36mers from the Helicobacter acinonychis genome. We found that error rates range from 0.3% at the beginning of reads to 3.8% at the end of reads. Wrong base calls are frequently preceded by base G. Base substitution error frequencies vary by 10- to 11-fold, with A > C transversion being among the most frequent and C > G transversions among the least frequent substitution errors. Insertions and deletions of single bases occur at very low rates. When simulating re-sequencing we found a 20-fold sequencing coverage to be sufficient to compensate errors by correct reads. The read coverage of the sequenced regions is biased; the highest read density was found in intervals with elevated GC content. High Solexa quality scores are over-optimistic and low scores underestimate the data quality. Our results show different types of biases and ways to detect them. Such biases have implications on the use and interpretation of Solexa data, for de novo sequencing, re-sequencing, the identification of single nucleotide polymorphisms and DNA methylation sites, as well as for transcriptome analysis.

Keywords

BiologyTransversionGeneticsDNA sequencingDeep sequencingComputational biologyIllumina dye sequencingHybrid genome assemblyReference genomeGenomeSequence assemblyDNATranscriptomeGeneMutation

MeSH Terms

Base CompositionBeta vulgarisDNAHelicobacterSequence AnalysisDNASequence DeletionSoftware

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
36
Issue
16
Pages
e105-e105
Citations
1083
Access
Closed

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1083
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68
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869
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Cite This

Juliane C. Dohm, Claudio Lottaz, Tatiana Borodina et al. (2008). Substantial biases in ultra-short read data sets from high-throughput DNA sequencing. Nucleic Acids Research , 36 (16) , e105-e105. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkn425

Identifiers

DOI
10.1093/nar/gkn425
PMID
18660515
PMCID
PMC2532726

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%