| Literature DB >> 25326703 |
Sasan Amini1, Dmitry Pushkarev1, Lena Christiansen1, Emrah Kostem1, Tom Royce1, Casey Turk1, Natasha Pignatelli1, Andrew Adey2, Jacob O Kitzman2, Kandaswamy Vijayan1, Mostafa Ronaghi1, Jay Shendure2, Kevin L Gunderson1, Frank J Steemers1.
Abstract
Haplotype-resolved genome sequencing enables the accurate interpretation of medically relevant genetic variation, deep inferences regarding population history and non-invasive prediction of fetal genomes. We describe an approach for genome-wide haplotyping based on contiguity-preserving transposition (CPT-seq) and combinatorial indexing. Tn5 transposition is used to modify DNA with adaptor and index sequences while preserving contiguity. After DNA dilution and compartmentalization, the transposase is removed, resolving the DNA into individually indexed libraries. The libraries in each compartment, enriched for neighboring genomic elements, are further indexed via PCR. Combinatorial 96-plex indexing at both the transposition and PCR stage enables the construction of phased synthetic reads from each of the nearly 10,000 'virtual compartments'. We demonstrate the feasibility of this method by assembling >95% of the heterozygous variants in a human genome into long, accurate haplotype blocks (N50 = 1.4-2.3 Mb). The rapid, scalable and cost-effective workflow could enable haplotype resolution to become routine in human genome sequencing.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25326703 PMCID: PMC4409979 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330