| Literature DB >> 33290507 |
Yongping Li1,2, Tobias Fehlmann1, Adam Borcherding3, Snezana Drmanac3, Sophie Liu3, Laura Groeger4, Chongjun Xu2,3,5,6, Matthew Callow3, Christian Villarosa3, Alexander Jorjorian3, Fabian Kern1, Nadja Grammes1, Eckart Meese4, Hui Jiang2, Radoje Drmanac2,3,5,6, Nicole Ludwig4, Andreas Keller1,7.
Abstract
Results of massive parallel sequencing-by-synthesis vary depending on the sequencing approach. CoolMPS™ is a new sequencing chemistry that incorporates bases by labeled antibodies. To evaluate the performance, we sequenced 240 human non-coding RNA samples (dementia patients and controls) with and without CoolMPS. The Q30 value as indicator of the per base sequencing quality increased from 91.8 to 94%. The higher quality was reached across the whole read length. Likewise, the percentage of reads mapping to the human genome increased from 84.9 to 86.2%. For both technologies, we computed similar distributions between different RNA classes (miRNA, piRNA, tRNA, snoRNA and yRNA) and within the classes. While standard sequencing-by-synthesis allowed to recover more annotated miRNAs, CoolMPS yielded more novel miRNAs. The correlation between the two methods was 0.97. Evaluating the diagnostic performance, we observed lower minimal P-values for CoolMPS (adjusted P-value of 0.0006 versus 0.0004) and larger effect sizes (Cohen's d of 0.878 versus 0.9). Validating 19 miRNAs resulted in a correlation of 0.852 between CoolMPS and reverse transcriptase-quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Comparison to data generated with Illumina technology confirmed a known shift in the overall RNA composition. With CoolMPS we evaluated a novel sequencing-by-synthesis technology showing high performance for the analysis of non-coding RNAs.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33290507 PMCID: PMC7826284 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkaa1122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971