| Literature DB >> 24460756 |
Vinzenz Lange, Irina Böhme1, Jan Hofmann, Kathrin Lang, Jürgen Sauter, Bianca Schöne, Patrick Paul, Viviane Albrecht, Johanna M Andreas, Daniel M Baier, Jochen Nething, Ulf Ehninger, Carmen Schwarzelt, Julia Pingel, Gerhard Ehninger, Alexander H Schmidt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A close match of the HLA alleles between donor and recipient is an important prerequisite for successful unrelated hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. To increase the chances of finding an unrelated donor, registries recruit many hundred thousands of volunteers each year. Many registries with limited resources have had to find a trade-off between cost and resolution and extent of typing for newly recruited donors in the past. Therefore, we have taken advantage of recent improvements in NGS to develop a workflow for low-cost, high-resolution HLA typing.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24460756 PMCID: PMC3909933 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-63
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Workflow for analyzing 384 samples. 8 Fluidigm chips with 48 samples each are pooled for one MiSeq run.
Figure 2Correlation of DNA concentration and total reads for 384 samples. Mean DNA concentration: 77 ng/μl, mean number of reads: 30,605, coefficient of correlation: 0.26.
Figure 3Dual indexing in a 4-primer approach. The 2 outer and 2 inner primers are combined in one PCR reaction to yield a MiSeq compatible product with dual indexing. Each sample is first mixed with a unique combination of outer primer indexes. The 48 samples are then combined with up to 48 target-specific primer sets in 2304 separate reaction chambers on the Fluidigm chip for PCR.
Figure 4Location of HLA specific primers. Primers are located in the introns surrounding exon 2 or 3 respectively. There is no overlap with the exonic sequence with the exception of HLA-DQB1 exon 3 forward and HLA-DRB1 exon 3 reverse which overlap by few bases with the exonic sequence.
Figure 5Optimization and performance of primer sets. (a) Classification of reads based on known typing results using sequence and Q-values. PCR artifacts resulting in artificial hybrids of allele1 and allele2 are reported as “crossover“. (b) Optimization of primer sets - Allele balancing: Example of an optimized primer set (A Exon 2) demonstrating balanced amplification and sufficient read counts. (c) Optimization of primer sets - Allele amplification bias: Example of an unoptimized primer set (B Exon 3) demonstrating negative amplification bias for allele groups B*14 and B*27. (d) Crossover artifact quantification: 48 samples were amplified using 30 to 36 PCR cycles and the rate of crossover formation was quantified for each locus and exon. Sample-loci with homozygous results were not considered for analysis. Lowering the number of PRC cycles reduces the crossover-rate.
Figure 6Coverage. Reads per amplicon and sample over 9 runs (3398 samples). Boxes represent median and first and third quartile, whiskers correspond to the interquartile range and outliers are plotted.
Resolution in comparison with Sanger based sequencing
| A | 90.4% | 99.8% |
| B | 95.0% | 97.6% |
| C | 92.3% | 95.7% |
| DPB1 | 99.8% | 99.9% |
| DQB1 | 95.7% | 100.0% |
| DRB1 | 96.6% | 100.0% |
| Average | 95.0% | 98.8% |
Rate of high resolution typing results. Resolution of 37,975 samples typed by the proposed NGS approach in September 2013 was compared with 145,932 samples analyzed by Sanger sequencing in 2012. In accordance with the standards of the European Federation for Immunogenetics (EFI), we refer to allele typing results with no ambiguities in the antigen recognition site as “high resolution”.
Figure 7Schematic representation of primer recognition level three. In this example, primer 5 would have been assigned to the tested read.
Figure 8Sketch showing generation of EAGs and PEAGs in forward and reverse read direction. Each row represents the exon sequence of one HLA allele on a specific locus and exon. The chart shows how the EAGs and PEAGs in forward and reverse direction are generated.