Literature DB >> 23736940

Single nucleotide polymorphism typing with massively parallel sequencing for human identification.

Seung Bum Seo1, Jonathan L King, David H Warshauer, Carey P Davis, Jianye Ge, Bruce Budowle.   

Abstract

The Ion AmpliSeq™ HID single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) panel, a primer pool of 103 autosomal SNPs and 33 Y-SNPs, was evaluated using the Ion 314™ Chip on the Ion PGM™ Sequencer with four DNA samples. The study focused on the sequencing of DNA at three different initial target quantities, related interpretation issues, and concordance of results with another sequencing platform, i.e., Genome Analyzer IIx. With 10 ng of template DNA, all genotypes at the 136 SNPs were detected. With 1 ng of DNA, all SNPs were detected and one SNP locus in one sample showed extreme heterozygote imbalance on allele coverage. With 100 pg of DNA, an average of 1.6 SNP loci were not detected, and an average of 4.3 SNPs showed heterozygote imbalance. The average sequence coverage was 945-600× at autosomal SNPs and 465-209× at Y-SNPs for 10 ng-100 pg of DNA. The average heterozygote allele coverage ratio was 89.6-61.8 % for 10 ng-100 pg of DNA. At 10 ng of DNA, all genotypes of the 95 SNPs shared between the two different sequencing platforms were concordant except for one SNP, rs1029047. The error was due to the misalignment of a flanking homopolymer. Overall, the data support that genotyping a large battery of SNPs is feasible with massively parallel sequencing. With barcode systems, better allele balance, and specifically designed alignment software, a more comprehensive rapid genotyping and more cost-effective results may be obtained from multiple samples in one analysis than are possible with current typing and capillary electrophoresis systems.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23736940     DOI: 10.1007/s00414-013-0879-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Legal Med        ISSN: 0937-9827            Impact factor:   2.686


  15 in total

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Authors:  B Budowle; J V Planz; R S Campbell; A J Eisenberg
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5.  Effects of the Ion PGM™ Hi-Q™ sequencing chemistry on sequence data quality.

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6.  Identification of Korean-specific SNP markers from whole-exome sequencing data.

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10.  Haplotype Counting for Sensitive Chimerism Testing: Potential for Early Leukemia Relapse Detection.

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