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High-Throughput Sequencing Technologies. Biological Sequence Analysis BNFO 691/602 Spring 2014 Mark Reimers. Outline. What can we do with next-generation sequencing? De novo sequencing of simple genomes Re-sequence individual variations
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High-Throughput Sequencing Technologies Biological Sequence Analysis BNFO 691/602 Spring 2014 Mark Reimers
Outline • What can we do with next-generation sequencing? • De novo sequencing of simple genomes • Re-sequence individual variations • Generate genome-wide quantitative data for a variety of assays • What technologies are now available and which are up-and-coming? • Roche, Illumina, SOLiD, Ion Torrent, etc…
What is High-Throughput Sequencing? • Generating many thousands or millions of short (30 to 1,000 base) sequences by sequencing parts of longer (200+ base) DNA fragments • Most research uses reads from one end of a fragment (single-end), but most technologies can be adapted to make paired-end reads on opposite strands
Full Genome Re-sequencing has been done for many cancers and rare clinical disorders
Exomesequencing is a cost-effective to identify denovo protein coding mutations
Targeted re-sequencing of a few relevant genes can identify diverse critical mutations across a large number of cases
DNA methylation profiling mC C C U After PCR C C U T PCR+Seq
DNAse Hyper-sensitivity • DNAse I enzyme cuts DNA • Much more likely to cut at open chromatin • Two approaches: • Cut slowly then fragment and sequence ends • Cut rapidly then sequence short fragments
Mapping of chromatin interactions (5C) (courtesy Elemento lab)
HTS Technologies • Roche-454 • Illumina • SOLiD • Ion Torrent • Newer Technologies • Outlook
Founded by Jonathan Rothberg as a secret project (code-named ‘454’) within CuraGen
Roche 454 Sequencing Metzker, NG 2010
Advantages & Drawbacks • PRO Long reads are uniquely identifiable Relatively quick ~20 hours total • CON Cost is relatively high Frequent errors in runs of bases Frequent G-A transitions
Best Uses of Roche 454 • De novo small genome (prokaryote or small eukaryote genome) sequencing • Metagenomics by16S profiling • Used to be best for metagenomics by random sequencing • new long reads from Illumina are competitive • Targeted re-sequencing of small samples
Paired-End Illumina Method Paired-end reads are easy on Illumina because the clusters are generated by ligated linkers. Different linkers and primers are attached to each end
Advantages & Drawbacks • PRO • Very high throughput • Most widespread technology so that comparisons seem easier • CON • Sequencing representation biases, especially at beginning • Slow – up to a week for a run
Best Uses of Illumina • Expression analysis (RNA-Seq) • Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP-Seq) • Metagenomics by random sequencing
SOLiD History • George Church licensed his ‘polony’ technique to Agencourt Personal Genomics • ABI acquired the SOLiD technology from Agencourt in 2006
SOLiD Preparation Steps • Prepare either single or ‘mate-pair’ library from DNA fragments • Attach library molecules to beads; amplify library by emulsion PCR • Modify 3’ ends of clones; attach beads to surface
Emulsion PCR • Emulsion PCR isolates individual DNA molecules along with primer-coated beads in aqueous droplets within an oil phase. A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) then coats each bead with clonal copies of the DNA molecule. The bead is immobilized for sequencing.
SOLiD Reads Each Base Twice Most bases are matched by two primers in different ligation cycles
SOLiD Color Coding Scheme Blue is color of homopolymer runs If you translate color reads directly into base reads then every sequence with an error in the color calls will result in a frame-shift of the base calls. it is best to convert the reference sequence into color-space. There is one unambiguous conversion of a base reference sequence into color-space, but there are four possible conversions of a color string into base strings
Advantages & Drawbacks • PRO • Very high throughput • Di-base ligation ensures built-in accuracy check • Low error rate for low-coverage • Can handle repetitive regions easily • CON • Strong cycle-dependent biases (can be modeled and partly overcome – see Wu et al, Nature Methods, 2011) • Low quality color calls (Phred < 20) are common • Reported problems with paired ends – most mapped tags don’t map to the same chromosome
Ion Torrent Sample Prep • Emulsion PCR loads copies of unique sequences onto beads • One bead is deposited in each well of a micro-machined plate
When a nucleotide is incorporated into a strand of DNA by a polymerase, a hydrogen ion is released From promotional material
Ion Torrent Sequencing Process As in 454, nucleotides are washed over the nascent strand in a prescribed sequence. Each time a nucleotide is incorporated, hydrogen ions are released and detected.
Ion Torrent Advantages & Drawbacks Loading Density • PRO • Very high throughput potential • Very fast (an afternoon) • CON • Homopolymer runs are still a problem • Very uneven loading of sequences wastes a lot of real estate on the chips • No prospect of paired-ends • Not many applications yet for their error model
Newest Machine – Ion Proton • $150K per machine • Ion Proton I chip has 165 million sensors • Intended for exomes • Ion Proton II chip has 660 million sensors • 50X more than 318 chip • Claim $1K genome this year
Newer Technologies • Complete Genomics • Pacific Biosciences • Oxford Nanopore
Complete Genomics • Service company only – no equipment sales • ~$4,000 per human genome (2011 price) • DNA Nanoball technology generates paired-end sequences plated at high density • Sequenced by ligation
Pacific Biosciences • Single-molecule real-time (SMRT) sequencing by circular strand technology using semiconductor technology • Long reads promised at under $200 per genome • High error rates reported
Oxford Nanopore • Single-molecule sequencing by threading DNA through a protein nanopore • GridION is a general technology for sequencing polymers by measuring current – can do polypeptides also