| Literature DB >> 25815165 |
Andy Kilianski1, Jamie L Haas2, Elizabeth J Corriveau1, Alvin T Liem1, Kristen L Willis3, Dana R Kadavy2, C Nicole Rosenzweig1, Samuel S Minot2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The MinION™ nanopore sequencer was recently released to a community of alpha-testers for evaluation using a variety of sequencing applications. Recent reports have tested the ability of the MinION™ to act as a whole genome sequencer and have demonstrated that nanopore sequencing has tremendous potential utility. However, the current nanopore technology still has limitations with respect to error-rate, and this is problematic when attempting to assemble whole genomes without secondary rounds of sequencing to correct errors. In this study, we tested the ability of the MinION™ nanopore sequencer to accurately identify and differentiate bacterial and viral samples via directed sequencing of characteristic genes shared broadly across a target clade.Entities:
Keywords: Amplicon; Escherichia coli; Long-read sequencing; MinION™; NGS; Nanopore; Oxford Nanopore; Pathogen detection; Poxvirus; Whole genome sequencing
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25815165 PMCID: PMC4374364 DOI: 10.1186/s13742-015-0051-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gigascience ISSN: 2047-217X Impact factor: 6.524
Raw statistics for bacterial and viral sequencing runs on the MinION™
| BLASR | LAST | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dataset | Number of reads | Number of bases | Mean read length | Number of reads aligned | Mean aligned read length | Mean alignment identity | Number of reads aligned | Mean aligned read length | Mean alignment identity |
|
| 1190 | 917039 | 770.6 | 270 | 651.4 | 70.9 | 751 | 853.313 | 66.147 |
|
| 589 | 492036 | 835.4 | 18 | 353.8 | 70.1 | 173 | 750.873 | 62.0234 |
|
| 1335 | 1697710 | 1271.7 | 40 | 443.1 | 69.9 | 627 | 758.222 | 61.5688 |
|
| 296 | 847593 | 2963.5 | 27 | 622.9 | 70.8 | 47 | 1143.21 | 64.8436 |
Figure 1Distribution of read alignments along the reference using BLASR. Each mapped read (only 40 reads are depicted here) is depicted by a blue bar. Percent identity to the reference is displayed by the tint, with lighter blue being more identical to the reference. A majority of the reads mapped here were approximately 70-75% identical to the reference. Many mapped reads span the entire length of the reference, represented on the x-axis, with no overhang.
Figure 2Bases aligned for vaccinia-Lister sample sequencing run using BLASR. The number of aligned bases for the vaccinia-Lister dataset are represented by the bars, having been aligned to a reference database containing the complete collection of known targets of the PCR primers that were used.
BLASR/LAST read mapping statistics to genus and species levels from bacterial and viral reads
| Mapping tool | Dataset | Reads aligning to genus | Bases aligning to genus | Reads aligning to species | Bases aligning to species | Reads aligning to non-genus | Bases aligning to non-genus | Bases aligning to genus/bases aligning to non-genus | Genus | Species | Strain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| 291 | 189590 | 151 | 97410 | 172 | 96260 | 1.97 | Orthopoxvirus | Vaccinia | Lister |
|
| 25 | 9634 | 21 | 8381 | 12 | 2951 | 3.26 | Orthopoxvirus | Vaccinia | MVA | |
|
| 56 | 23036 | 56 | 23036 | 14 | 2533 | 9.09 | Orthopoxvirus | Cowpox | - | |
|
| 19 | 15485 | 16 | 12640 | 7 | 2083 | 7.43 | Shigella | coli | - | |
|
|
| 151 | 140099 | 29 | 26967 | 308 | 274216 | 0.51 | Orthopoxvirus | Vaccinia | MVA |
|
| 44 | 37511 | 43 | 36507 | 21 | 18400 | 2.04 | Orthopoxvirus | Vaccinia | MVA | |
|
| 89 | 72375 | 89 | 72375 | 50 | 41077 | 1.76 | Orthopoxvirus | Cowpox | - | |
|
| 17 | 20399 | 17 | 20399 | 32 | 35661 | 0.57 | Escherichia | coli | - |