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  • Live Blogging from the CHI Next Gen Conference! (San Diego, CA): Updated Day 2

    The CHI Next Gen Sequencing Conference started late today, and I will be there for the next two days trying to report as live as possible! Please feel free to post here with your thoughts or questions about what's going on! Should be a good time...Helicos is first tomorrow morning!

    I know of at least a few other SEQanswers members that will be there...hopefully I'll get to meet a few of you. Post or PM me if you're planning on being there!

    Details are below!

    *********************************************
    Cambridge Healthtech Institute's Second Annual...

    Next Generation Sequencing Technologies
    Platforms, Applications, and Case Studies
    April 23 - 24, 2008 * Hilton San Diego Resort * San Diego, CA


    http://www.healthtech.com/seq/overview.aspx?c=542

    *********************************************

  • #2
    So I'm here with not much groundbreaking to report. The morning had Helicos and the usual suspects (Illumina and 454) with the notable exception of ABI..."who only found out about this conference a week ago!"

    Some excellent panel discussions were had, I'll put up the highlights later.

    I did however get to meet a few faces from the forum, including Mike (mcariaso) from WikiLIMS/Bioteam, Julia (JKK) from In-Sequence, and Kevin McCarthy from Danaher-Motion. Nice meeting you all!

    Comment


    • #3
      Hi,
      did Helicos present any new data about sequencing capacity or comment on the current product vs what was used for the Science publication?

      Comment


      • #4
        Hey Chipper....

        They did. The presenter (their VP/CSO Patrice Milos) stated that the data in the M13 paper was from a system "18 months old", and their new system has much improved chemistry utilizing "virtual terminators" to improve homopolymer performance and extend read lengths. Not really any further details on the chemistry improvements.

        They did present very preliminary data showing the Helicos mate pair approaches, one of which is novel. Basically they run an initial sequencing run "upward" from their oligo-(dT) primer for 25-30 nucleotides, then perform a "dark fill" which is controlled incorporation of many unlabeled nucleotides (here...50-100), followed by another sequencing run in the same orientation further "upward" to generate two short reads physically separated by a known number of nucleotides (defined by the size of the dark fill).

        And they also have a more traditional mate pair approach that reads up, then back down. This requires more complex sample prep with a ligated adapter in addition to their standard poly-A tailing.

        Comment


        • #5
          Details on obtaining the presentations (very few are available) are available in the attachment.
          Attached Files

          Comment


          • #6
            Final Day 1 updates

            Sequencing via just looking at the bases!

            Why didn't we think of that!

            Another really neat talk was that of William Glover of ZS Genetics. Via labeling nucleotides with single atoms of varying density (examples were bromination and iodination), and stretching DNA out on a surface, they are able to actually image the sequence using transmission electron microscopes.

            Not that much in the way of data, but the presenter was clearly excited that they would use commodity hardware, and achieve read lengths of over 8kb!!

            Pacific Biosciences continues to dazzle...


            Stephen Turner's talk was absolutely phenomenal. I did miss Marco Island (fireworks and all), but this presentation was not only delivered with unprecedented eloquence and clarity, but was filled with actual convincing proof of principle data. Real time image data showing their "Zero Mode Waveguides" idling in the presence of only 3 nucleotides, then upon addition of the fourth nucleotide thousands of wells jump alive making individual incorporations detected by the system. There was also real data demonstrating potential read lengths, showing >12 sequential passes around a 135bp minicircle....resulting in >1500 bases of sequence. Not to mention that's instantly 12x coverage of that molecule.

            ST openly states that the first machines aren't scheduled to ship for 2 years from now...but when they do...watch out bioinformatics guys. They have 5 year line of sight to ~100Gb/hour. That's 15 minutes to a human genome. There is no cycling, no pausing, no terminators, no fluor removal, just push the "go" button and watch the polymerase do its thing.

            Real time, single molecule detection with this technology is nothing short of amazing.

            The Polonator: Academics Gone Wild...

            We also got a detailed description of the Polonator's inner workings and the chemistry that the instrument has been "launched" with. I put quotes around it because it seems clear that not many people will run with this chemistry, but Danaher and Church encourage development of alternate chemistries through the "open source" nature of the Polonator.

            My negative impression of the initial chemistry is due solely to the fact that there is approximately a lifetimes worth of molecular biology required up front, including three (yes...THREE), amplification steps. This for 26 bases of paired end sequence, not 26x2, but 6+7 and 6+7 from each of the mate pairs. The much abbreviated workflow is as such:
            • Shear to ~1kb
            • Size Select
            • Blunt, A-tail
            • Ligate 30-mer
            • T-tail
            • Circularize via dilute ligation
            • Run rolling circle amplification (amp #1)
            • Digest with MmeI (tagging enzyme, type IIS RE), blunt
            • ligate F&R linkers
            • Limited PCR to enrich for ligation products (amp #2)
            • Setup and Run emulsion PCR (amp #3)
            • Capture successfully amplified beads with another larger set of capture beads
            • Deposit beads on flow cell and start sequencing using ligation based chemistry a la Agencourt-->ABI SOLiD.
            • Run 80 hours to obtain 6+7 bases of sequence from each of the two mate pair tags.
            Whew. I was exhausted writing it down and now typing it, I can't imagine what it's like to run. It's like 454 + SOLiD on steroids.

            Overall it was a great day, I really enjoyed myself.

            Comment


            • #7
              thanks eco for sharing all this info
              --
              bioinfosm

              Comment


              • #8
                No prob bioinfosm....hopefully it's helpful!

                The morning of Day 2 was the Genome Center Battle. We heard details about pipelines and processes from Broad, Baylor, JGI, JCVI, and WashU's GSC. Many of the challenges that they have worked out really are important for smaller labs to think about as they get into the "Now"-generation sequencing space. Reproducibility, contamination, QC of data, analysis, storage, archival storage, should be a part of any lab's setup plan.

                Broad's presentation was the most impressive, seeming more out of a
                six-sigma optimized semiconductor fab facility than a mostly human-driven wet molecular biology lab. Something not often seen in molbio research space. The process supervisor really put together a nice story about their pipeline and how they handle and track seemingly "routine" processes on a scale that is like no other in the world (20+ Solexa GAII-PE machines!).

                Some of the QC assays the centers are implementing were interesting, including a qPCR assay for quantitating libraries to ensure appropriate ratios of fragments:beads (this has been published). Also an "in situ" quantitation of cluster density directly on a Solexa flow cell, via staining with Sybrgreen and imaging analysis. This allows them to save tremendous amounts of sequencing reagents by trashing sub-optimal flow cells.

                Many if not all of the centers presented comparisons of the costs of running each of these instruments....the most well articulated was from Vincent Magrini from WashU, however none were clear if they included labor costs:

                454: $6900 per run for 400Mb
                Illumina: $9300 per run for 2Gb
                SOLiD: $15,000 per run for 4Gb

                Many of the centers are also using combined short/long/Sanger read workflows for genome finishing.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by ECO View Post
                  Details on obtaining the presentations (very few are available) are available in the attachment.
                  That's really, really an awesome link. Thanx so much for sharing this info.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by ECO View Post
                    No prob bioinfosm....hopefully it's helpful!
                    454: $6900 per run for 400Mb
                    Illumina: $9300 per run for 2Gb
                    SOLiD: $15,000 per run for 4Gb
                    Are these cost nbrs recent? Mine are extra fresh from the day from AB Europe. Price list for reagents/cost excl. VAT

                    SOLID 4Gb
                    Slide 1 "section": €2600->2600/section
                    Slide 4: €3700->~900/section
                    Slide 8: €5300->~670/section

                    SOLID mate-paired 6Gb
                    Slide 1: €3650->3650/section
                    Slide 4: €4700->~1177/section
                    Slide 8: €6300->~791/section

                    SOLID instr. ~k€460
                    Last edited by DNAcowboy; 04-25-2008, 04:39 AM.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      This is great stuff, ECO.

                      Have there been any mentions of the sequence compression found in 454? Is there any improvement in Solexa read length?

                      Also, how much is being discussed about the Bioinformatics back-up following the sequencing: e.g. which tools are people using?
                      Cheers,

                      Chris

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by DNAcowboy View Post
                        That's really, really an awesome link. Thanx so much for sharing this info.
                        Anytime! Hopefully CHI doesn't bring the smackdown on me.

                        Originally posted by DNAcowboy View Post
                        Are these cost nbrs recent? Mine are extra fresh from the day from AB Europe. Price list for reagents/cost excl. VAT

                        SOLID 4Gb
                        Slide 1 "section": €2600->2600/section
                        Slide 4: €3700->~900/section
                        Slide 8: €5300->~670/section

                        SOLID mate-paired 6Gb
                        Slide 1: €3650->3650/section
                        Slide 4: €4700->~1177/section
                        Slide 8: €6300->~791/section

                        SOLID instr. ~k€460
                        This was from the guy's talk from WashU...could definitely be older. ABI wasn't there presenting so there was no rebuttal or corrections.

                        Originally posted by chris View Post
                        This is great stuff, ECO.

                        Have there been any mentions of the sequence compression found in 454? Is there any improvement in Solexa read length?

                        Also, how much is being discussed about the Bioinformatics back-up following the sequencing: e.g. which tools are people using?
                        Cheers,

                        Chris
                        There were really no detailed homopolymer/454 discussions, seems that's mostly been worked out, and/or avoided with lots of coverage. They did briefly mention that their new chemistry will improve that performance in addition to giving 400bp reads (700mb total, 10 hour run).

                        Solexa read length was almost universally reported as 36bp. But they have just launched the "GA II" which is an upgrade that purports >50bp reads. But I don't think anyone was running it yet. There is also an external module required to do paired ends on the Solexa...it's basically an additional reagent pump station.

                        In terms of detailed discussions of backups, there wasn't much. Brian O'conner discussed what they do at UCLA, which is use a combination of Xsan storage for the reads themselves (~150Gb/run ~$1700/TB), and PogoLinux boxes for the images and other stuff (~450Gb/run ~$600/TB). Everyone is still saving the images as far as I can tell, but they would of course love to avoid it. I think it was PacBio that discussed a bitwise compressed format for their "traces" which reduces all the information to 48 bytes per base.

                        I forgot to mention the serious smackdown given to Affy by Stephen Kingsmore, his talk is included in the list. Basically he did complete comparisons between Illumina DGE and Affy expression analyses, I'll leave it to you to determine what the results showed! The best part of the conference however was during the question/answer period for Kingsmore's talk (which had just finished slamming Affy), when a very quiet mild-mannered guy stood up and said that he was the guy who designed all the Affy Human Arrays! It was one of those tense quiet/gasp moments for the crowd. He immediately pointed out that based on the genes and coverage reported for Affy, that it was obvious that the researcher had used the outdated previous generation (U133, >5 years old) of Affy chips, which have been upgraded significantly since. Either way...I think Affy is in deep trouble.

                        Woohoo, happy friday people!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by ECO View Post
                          Sequencing via just looking at the bases!

                          Why didn't we think of that!

                          Another really neat talk was that of William Glover of ZS Genetics. Via labeling nucleotides with single atoms of varying density (examples were bromination and iodination), and stretching DNA out on a surface, they are able to actually image the sequence using transmission electron microscopes.

                          Not that much in the way of data, but the presenter was clearly excited that they would use commodity hardware, and achieve read lengths of over 8kb!!
                          Yeah, that was an interesting talk... although I did like the point that one of the audience members made during question time about how they intend to make their money. I don't think that question was answered very well... he basically just said they'd sell a high-spec scope, then there were next-to-no consumables, that the 'chips' (or whatever they're calling the solid supports) will also cost an insignificant amount because the semiconducter industry already has the fabrication process under control.

                          Interesting, nonetheless... if it works. As you pointed out, there was really no data there, other than a sketchy EM of some unreadable partially labelled DNA.

                          Scott.
                          Last edited by ScottC; 04-27-2008, 05:32 AM.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by ECO View Post

                            Solexa read length was almost universally reported as 36bp. But they have just launched the "GA II" which is an upgrade that purports >50bp reads. But I don't think anyone was running it yet. There is also an external module required to do paired ends on the Solexa...it's basically an additional reagent pump station.
                            Yeah, I think people are using the 50bp reads, but not many. I don't think they're shipping the 50bp kits yet, are they? The broad are doing it, of course.

                            Originally posted by ECO View Post
                            I forgot to mention the serious smackdown given to Affy by Stephen Kingsmore, his talk is included in the list.
                            As you mentioned, the Affy designer that stood up at the end did some pretty good 'smackdown' in return. I thought that was pretty bad form of them to basically stand up and bad-mouth the product, and not to say that they're using outdated products! If they didn't know they were using outdated products... well surely that's even worse. I thought he defended himself pretty well.


                            Overall, as a researcher in bacterial pathogenesis, I was a bit disappointed that there wasn't more prokaryotic work presented, or more de novo assembly information presented.

                            Scott (recovering from 15 hour flights... ugh).

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by ECO View Post
                              In terms of detailed discussions of backups, there wasn't much. Brian O'conner discussed what they do at UCLA, which is use a combination of Xsan storage for the reads themselves (~150Gb/run ~$1700/TB), and PogoLinux boxes for the images and other stuff (~450Gb/run ~$600/TB). Everyone is still saving the images as far as I can tell, but they would of course love to avoid it. I think it was PacBio that discussed a bitwise compressed format for their "traces" which reduces all the information to 48 bytes per base.
                              They're storing the images?! Why? That's a serious amount space to assign just for archive. AFAIK this wasn't done routinely for ABI sequencing, so why do it for HTS? Is it a justifiable expense in case someone would wish to re-analyse them?

                              Overall, as a researcher in bacterial pathogenesis, I was a bit disappointed that there wasn't more prokaryotic work presented, or more de novo assembly information presented.
                              At a recent workshop I attended this was a common query and according to some accounts current de novo software can't cope with the depth of coverage generated by Solexa et al...

                              Comment

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