| Literature DB >> 36212714 |
Muhammad Tariq Pervez1, Mirza Jawad Ul Hasnain1, Syed Hassan Abbas1, Mahmoud F Moustafa2,3, Naeem Aslam4, Syed Shah Muhammad Shah5.
Abstract
Background: Next-generation sequencing methods have been developed and proposed to investigate any query in genomics or clinical activity involving DNA. Technical advancement in these sequencing methods has enhanced sequencing volume to several billion nucleotides within a very short time and low cost. During the last few years, the usage of the latest DNA sequencing platforms in a large number of research projects helped to improve the sequencing methods and technologies, thus enabling a wide variety of research/review publications and applications of sequencing technologies. Objective: The proposed study is aimed at highlighting the most fast and accurate NGS instruments developed by various companies by comparing output per hour, quality of the reads, maximum read length, reads per run, and their applications in various domains. This will help research institutions and biological/clinical laboratories to choose the sequencing instrument best suited to their environment. The end users will have a general overview about the history of the sequencing technologies, latest developments, and improvements made in the sequencing technologies till now.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36212714 PMCID: PMC9537002 DOI: 10.1155/2022/3457806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.246
Figure 1Evolution of the sequencing methods in chronological order.
A comparison of Illumina benchtop sequencers [29].
| Methods/applications | iSeq 100 | MiniSeq | MiSeq series | NextSeq 550 series | Next Seq 1000 & 2000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ideal for | Every size lab | TG sequencing | Long read applications | Exome and transcriptome sequencing | miRNA and sRNA analysis |
| Major applications | sWGS (microbes) and TGS | iSeq 100+TG EP and 16S MS | iSeq 100+16S MGS | iSeq 100+TCS | sWGS (microbes), ES, SC profiling, TS, miRNA, and sRNA analysis |
| Max. data quality | >85% > Q30 | >85% > Q30 | >90% > Q30 | >80% > Q30 | >90% > Q30 |
| Run time | 9.5–19 h | 4–24 hours | 4–55 hours | 12–30 hours | 11-48 hours |
| Maximum output | 1.2 Gb | 7.5 Gb | 15 Gb | 120 Gb | 330 Gb∗ |
| Maximum reads per run | 4 million | 25 million | 25 million | 400 million | 1.1 billion |
| Maximum read length | 2 × 150 bp | 2 × 150 bp | 2 × 300 bp | 2 × 150 bp | 2 × 150 bp |
A comparison of Illumina production scale sequencer sequencers [29].
| Methods/applications | NextSeq 550 | NextSeq 550Dx | NextSeq 1000 & 2000 | NovaSeq 6000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ideal for | Research | Research+in vitro diagnostic | Targeted sequencing | Long read applications |
| Major applications | sWGS (microbes), TGS, and TCS | NextSeq 550+clinical NGS applications | NextSeq 550 series+SCP | NextSeq 550 series+NextSeq 1000 & 2000+lWGS |
| Max. data quality | >80% > Q30 | >75% > Q30 | >90% > Q30 | >90% > Q30 |
| Run time | 12-30 hours | 35 hours | 11-48 hours | 13-44 hours |
| Maximum output | 120 Gb | 90 Gb | 360 Gb | 6000 Gb |
| Maximum reads per run | 400 million | 300 million | 1.2 billion | 20 billion |
| Maximum read length | 2 × 150 bp | 2 × 150 bp | 2 × 150 bp | 2 × 250 bp |
Comparison of various Ion Torrent NGS instruments [33].
| Methods/applications | Ion GeneStudio S5 System | Ion GeneStudio S5 Plus System | Ion GeneStudio S5 Prime System | Ion PGM 314 | Ion PGM 316 | Ion PGM 318 | Ion Torrent GeneXus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Major applications | ES, TCS, EP, TGS, and sWGS (microbes) | TS (DNA/RNA), CNV, sRNA sequencing, de novo MICS, ChIP-seq, MA, SNP verification, and GbS | WGS, WES, TGS | ||||
| Run time (hours) | 4.5–21.5 | 3-20 | 3-10 | 2.3-3.7 | 3.0-4.9 | 4.4-7.3 | 2.5 |
| Maximum output | 15 Gb | 30 Gb | 50 Gb | 300–100 Mb | 300 Mb–1 Gb | 600 Mb–2 Gb | 15 Gb |
| Maximum reads per run | 2-80 million | 2-130 million | 2-130 million | 400–550 thousand | 2–3 million | 4–5.5 million | 12-15 million |
| Maximum read length | 200-600 bp | 200-600 bp | 200-600 bp | 200-400 bp | 200-400 bp | 200-400 bp | 200 |
| Compatible chips | Ion 510, 520, 530, 540 chips | Ion 510, 520, 530 | Ion 314 Chip V2 or Ion 314 Chip v2 BC | Ion 316 Chip V2 or Ion 316 Chip v2 BC | Ion 318 Chip V2 or Ion 318 Chip v2 BC | Ion Torrent GX5 Chip | |
| Max. data quality | >99% > Q30 | >80% > Q30 | >99% > Q30 | >99% > Q30 | >99% > Q30 | >99% > Q30 | >99% > Q30 |
Comparison of various BGI NGS instruments [38].
| Methods/applications | DNBSEQ-T7 | DNBSEQ-G400 FAST | DNBSEQ-G400 | DNBSEQ-G50 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Major applications | WGS, DES, EGS, TS | WGS, WES, TS, MGS, RNA-seq | WGS, WES | Targeted sequencing (DNA & RNA), pathogen identification, and SPS |
| Max. run time (hours) | 30 | 13 | 37 | 40 |
| Maximum output | 6 Tb | 330 Gb | 1440 Gb | 150 Gb |
| Maximum reads per run | 5000 million | 550 million | 1800 million | 770 million |
| Maximum read length | 150 PE | 150 PE | 200 PE/400 SE | 150 PE |
| Data quality | >85% > Q30 | >85% > Q30 | >85% > Q30 | >85% > Q30 |
An overview of human genome assembly quality metrics between PacBio system, Nanopore, and Illumina [49].
| Nanopore+Illumina | PacBio HiFi sequencing | |
|---|---|---|
| Contiguity (N50) | 32.3 Mb | 98.7 Mb |
| Correctness (quality score) | Q34 | Q51 |
| Completeness (genome size) | 2.8 Gb | 3.1 Gb |
Overall costs for sequencing a human genome [49].
| Nanopore+Illumina | PacBio HiFi sequencing | |
|---|---|---|
| (US $) | ||
| Consumables | 4800 | 3800 |
| Compute | 5050 | 3850 |
| Data storage | 5200 | 3900 |
Comparison of various high-performing sequencing instruments∗.
| Manufacturer | Read length | Data output | Max. run time (hours) | Chemistry | Key applications∗∗ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Illumina (NovaSeq 6000) | 300 PE | 6 Tb (6000 Gb) | 44 | Sequencing by synthesis | SS-WGS and TGS, TGEP, 16sMGS, WES, SCP, LS-WGS, CA, MS, MGP, CFS, LBA |
| Thermo Fisher Scientific Ion Torrent (Ion GeneStudio S5 Prime) | 600 SE | 50 Gb | 12 | Sequencing by synthesis | WGS, WES, TGS |
| GenapSys (16 chips) | 150 SE | 2 Gb | 24 | Sequencing by synthesis | TS, SS-WGS, GEV, 16S rRNA sequencing, sRNA sequencing, TSCAS |
| QIAGEN (GeneReader) | 100 SE | Not available | Not available | Sequencing by synthesis | Cancer research and identifying mutations |
| BGI/Complete Genomics | 400 SE | 6 Tb (6000 Gb) | 40 | DNA nanoball | Small and large WGS, WES and TGS |
| PacBio (HiFi Reads) | 25 Kb | 66.5 Gb | 30 | Real-time sequencing | DN sequencing, FT, identifying ASI, mutations, and EPM |
| Nanopore (PromethION) | 4 Mb | 14 Tb (14000 Gb) | 72 | Real-time sequencing | SV, GS, phasing, DNA and RNA base modifications, FT, and isoform detection |
∗Performance comparison is given as per manufacturer's description. ∗∗Applications by all sequencers of the respective manufacturer are listed. ∗∗Full names are given in Abbreviations.
Advantages and disadvantages of sequencing generations.
| Sequencing generation | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|
| First generation | High accuracy | High cost | |
| Helps in validating findings of NGS | Low throughput | ||
|
| |||
| Second generation | High throughput | Short read length | |
| Low cost | Difficult sample preparation | ||
| Have clinical applications | PCR amplification | ||
| Short run time | Long run time | ||
|
| |||
| Third generation | No PCR amplification | High sequencing error rate | |
| Require less starting material | |||
| Longer read lengths | |||
| Very low cost | |||
| Low error rate during library preparation | |||
| Fourth generation | Advantages of 3rdGS+ | ||
| Ultrafast: scan of whole genome in 15 minutes | |||
| Spatial distribution of the sequencing reads over the sample can be seen | |||
Figure 2Per hour output analysis of high-performing sequencers.