| Literature DB >> 28650462 |
Fan Zhang1, Lena Christiansen1, Jerushah Thomas1, Dmitry Pokholok1, Ros Jackson2, Natalie Morrell2, Yannan Zhao3, Melissa Wiley3, Emily Welch3, Erich Jaeger4, Ana Granat4, Steven J Norberg1, Aaron Halpern4, Maria C Rogert3, Mostafa Ronaghi1, Jay Shendure5, Niall Gormley2, Kevin L Gunderson6, Frank J Steemers1.
Abstract
Haplotype-resolved genome sequencing promises to unlock a wealth of information in population and medical genetics. However, for the vast majority of genomes sequenced to date, haplotypes have not been determined because of cumbersome haplotyping workflows that require fractions of the genome to be sequenced in a large number of compartments. Here we demonstrate barcode partitioning of long DNA molecules in a single compartment using "on-bead" barcoded tagmentation. The key to the method that we call "contiguity preserving transposition" sequencing on beads (CPTv2-seq) is transposon-mediated transfer of homogenous populations of barcodes from beads to individual long DNA molecules that get fragmented at the same time (tagmentation). These are then processed to sequencing libraries wherein all sequencing reads originating from each long DNA molecule share a common barcode. Single-tube, bulk processing of long DNA molecules with ∼150,000 different barcoded bead types provides a barcode-linked read structure that reveals long-range molecular contiguity. This technology provides a simple, rapid, plate-scalable and automatable route to accurate, haplotype-resolved sequencing, and phasing of structural variants of the genome.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28650462 DOI: 10.1038/nbt.3897
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Biotechnol ISSN: 1087-0156 Impact factor: 54.908