| Literature DB >> 26823973 |
Alfonso Benítez-Páez1, Kevin J Portune1, Yolanda Sanz1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The miniaturised and portable DNA sequencer MinION™ has been released to the scientific community within the framework of an early access programme to evaluate its application for a wide variety of genetic approaches. This technology has demonstrated great potential, especially in genome-wide analyses. In this study, we tested the ability of the MinION™ system to perform amplicon sequencing in order to design new approaches to study microbial diversity using nearly full-length 16S rDNA sequences.Entities:
Keywords: 16S rDNA amplicon sequencing; Long-read sequencing; Microbial diversity; MinION; Nanopore sequencer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26823973 PMCID: PMC4730766 DOI: 10.1186/s13742-016-0111-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gigascience ISSN: 2047-217X Impact factor: 6.524
Statistics of the mapping process using 16S rDNA reads produced by MinION™
| Organism | Mapped reads | Mapped bases | Strand mappinga | Max lengthb | Mean length | Variants after assembly | Consensus | rRNAgenec | Assembled 16Sd |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 98 | 99,352 | 0.46:0.54 | 1390 | 1013 | 32 | 1415 | 1529 | 0.93 |
|
| 79 | 73,480 | 0.49:0.51 | 1377 | 930 | 8 | 1407 | 1528 | 0.92 |
|
| 144 | 151,668 | 0.46:0.54 | 1419 | 1053 | 31 | 1415 | 1508 | 0.94 |
|
| 33 | 29,499 | 0.58:0.42 | 1346 | 893 | 25 | 1403 | 1510 | 0.93 |
|
| 97 | 99,476 | 0.46:0.54 | 1393 | 1025 | 13 | 1408 | 1505 | 0.94 |
|
| 73 | 69,940 | 0.45:0.55 | 1390 | 958 | 8 | 1398 | 1502 | 0.93 |
|
| 149 | 153,581 | 0.50:0.50 | 1398 | 1030 | 8 | 1444 | 1549 | 0.93 |
|
| 167 | 181,084 | 0.45:0.55 | 1398 | 1084 | 0 | 1434 | 1542 | 0.93 |
|
| 67 | 62,838 | 0.46:0.54 | 1390 | 937 | 11 | 1411 | 1498 | 0.94 |
|
| 123 | 128,120 | 0.51:0.49 | 1407 | 1041 | 0 | 1467 | 1579 | 0.93 |
|
| 139 | 140,478 | 0.50:0.50 | 1343 | 1010 | 13 | 1374 | 1486 | 0.92 |
|
| 87 | 86,916 | 0.48:0.52 | 1390 | 999 | 11 | 1433 | 1544 | 0.93 |
|
| 75 | 70,160 | 0.48:0.52 | 1375 | 935 | 21 | 1401 | 1525 | 0.92 |
|
| 113 | 120,520 | 0.55:0.45 | 1398 | 1066 | 14 | 1425 | 1536 | 0.93 |
|
| 95 | 89,750 | 0.52:0.48 | 1416 | 944 | 5 | 1352 | 1463 | 0.92 |
|
| 164 | 177,084 | 0.51:0.49 | 1423 | 1079 | 0 | 1443 | 1540 | 0.94 |
|
| 163 | 179,477 | 0.51:0.49 | 1423 | 1101 | 1 | 1435 | 1554 | 0.92 |
|
| 156 | 166,420 | 0.52:0.48 | 1411 | 1066 | 5 | 1439 | 1551 | 0.93 |
|
| 196 | 221,682 | 0.47:0.53 | 1411 | 1131 | 2 | 1440 | 1552 | 0.93 |
|
| 154 | 168,657 | 0.52:0.48 | 1411 | 1095 | 2 | 1442 | 1560 | 0.92 |
aProportion of reads mapped against the forward and complementary strand, respectively
bMaximum length of reads mapped
cLength of the 16S sequence used as reference
dNumbers are generated from Consensus/rRNA gene ratio
Fig. 1Species abundance in the mock community detected by MinION™. Species coverage was calculated by obtaining the fold-change (Log2) of species-specific read counting against the expected average for the entire community. A coverage bias was assumed when coverage deviation was lower than −1 or higher than 1
Fig. 2Sequencing coverage versus copies of respective 16S rRNA genes present in the starting material. Scatter plot of the coverage deviation calculated for B. vulgatus, C. beijerinkii, and E. coli against the calculated number of respective 16S copies present in the PCR sample used as starting material of the sequencing reaction
Fig. 3Per-base accuracy of the mapped reads. a Scatter plot of the GC content observed in mapped reads against the GC obtained from the reference sequences. The dashed line indicates a correlation with Pearson’s r = 1. b Correlation between the GC content observed in mapped reads and coverage bias observed in Fig. 1. c Influence of the GC content observed in mapped reads on mismatch rates calculated after mapping. d Scatter plot of the observed GC content of mapped reads and indel rates calculated after mapping. In all cases the Pearson’s r coefficients and p values supporting such correlations are presented inside the scatter plots and solid lines indicate the tendency of correlations
Taxonomy assignment of 2d reads derived from 16S rDNA sequencing using MinION™
| Genus assignment | At 80 % identity (SINA) | At 70 % identity (SINA) | At 60 % identity (SINA) | Species assignment (Blasta) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 3 | 3 | 4 |
|
|
| 61 | 93 | 103 |
|
|
| 69 | 96 | 111 |
|
|
| 2 | 2 | 3 |
|
|
| 37 | 55 | 60 |
|
|
| 4 | 8 | 10 |
|
|
| 0 | 2 | 2 | N/A |
|
| 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A |
|
| 0 | 1 | 1 | N/A |
|
| 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A |
|
| 0 | 0 | 1 |
|
|
| 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A |
|
| 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A |
|
| 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A |
| Total assigned | 176/601 | 260/601 | 300/601 | 172/601 |
aBlast searching against the NCBI bacterial 16S database. Valid assignments were based on E-values < 1e−03 and alignments larger than 800 bp. N/A means no species was found for the respective genus. Species matching with those present in the mock community are underlined and in bold. Rows with genera, species, and read counts highlighted with asterisk (*) indicate they are not expected to be present in the mock community