| Literature DB >> 28155888 |
Senne Cornelis1, Yannick Gansemans1, Lieselot Deleye1, Dieter Deforce1, Filip Van Nieuwerburgh1.
Abstract
One of the latest developments in next generation sequencing is the Oxford Nanopore Technologies' (ONT) MinION nanopore sequencer. We studied the applicability of this system to perform forensic genotyping of the forensic female DNA standard 9947 A using the 52 SNP-plex assay developed by the SNPforID consortium. All but one of the loci were correctly genotyped. Several SNP loci were identified as problematic for correct and robust genotyping using nanopore sequencing. All these loci contained homopolymers in the sequence flanking the forensic SNP and most of them were already reported as problematic in studies using other sequencing technologies. When these problematic loci are avoided, correct forensic genotyping using nanopore sequencing is technically feasible.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28155888 PMCID: PMC5290523 DOI: 10.1038/srep41759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Length profile (bp) of concatenated amplicons as measured with an Agilent High-Sensitivity DNA chip; internal marker at 35 bp and 10380 bp. (B) Read length (bp) histogram of the high quality two-directional (2D) nanopore reads.
Figure 2Number of extracted subreads per SNP locus (grey) and number of mapped subreads against the SNP reference sequence per SNP locus (black).
Figure 3Relative frequency of mapped subreads containing one of the two possible SNP alleles (grey and black).
Red bars show the proportion of reads containing an unexpected base at the SNP position. The allelic imbalance cut-offs are indicated by dashed lines. Loci discordant with the Illumina reference are indicated with an asterisk.