Abstract

We demonstrate that this new approach enables the assignment of virtually all the generated DNA sequences to the correct source once sequencing anomalies are accounted for (miss-assignment rate<0.4%). Therefore, the method enables accurate sequencing and assignment of homologous DNA sequences from multiple sources in single high-throughput GS20 run. We observe a bias in the distribution of the differently tagged primers that is dependent on the 5' nucleotide of the tag. In particular, primers 5' labelled with a cytosine are heavily overrepresented among the final sequences, while those 5' labelled with a thymine are strongly underrepresented. A weaker bias also exists with regards to the distribution of the sequences as sorted by the second nucleotide of the dinucleotide tags. As the results are based on a single GS20 run, the general applicability of the approach requires confirmation. However, our experiments demonstrate that 5'primer tagging is a useful method in which the sequencing power of the GS20 can be applied to PCR-based assays of multiple homologous PCR products. The new approach will be of value to a broad range of research areas, such as those of comparative genomics, complete mitochondrial analyses, population genetics, and phylogenetics.

Keywords

DNA nanoball sequencingDNA sequencingMassive parallel sequencingSequencing by ligationPrimer (cosmetics)BiologyGeneticsSequencing by hybridizationDNAComputational biologyPrimer dimerMultiple displacement amplificationPolymerase chain reactionDeep sequencingIn silico PCRGenomePyrosequencingGeneGenomic libraryDNA sequencerBase sequenceDNA extractionMultiplex polymerase chain reactionChemistry

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
2
Issue
2
Pages
e197-e197
Citations
533
Access
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Jonas Binladen, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Jonathan P. Bollback et al. (2007). The Use of Coded PCR Primers Enables High-Throughput Sequencing of Multiple Homolog Amplification Products by 454 Parallel Sequencing. PLoS ONE , 2 (2) , e197-e197. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000197

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DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0000197