Unconfigured Ad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • ECO
    --Site Admin--
    • Oct 2007
    • 1360

    Comprehensive Review of Genomic Enrichment Technologies for Next Gen Sequencing

    User sci_guy has posted a really great overview of genomic enrichment technologies in this thread: http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=8

    He sent me his original powerpoint which contains 22 slides of well organized, detailed summary points on the current state of the art in targeted sequencing enrichment technologies. It is attached to this post.

    Enjoy, and please comment here or in the specific relevant forum!



    [Apologies to anyone catching a duplicate on the RSS feed...had some time issues, so I reposted this.]
    Attached Files
  • seqer
    Member
    • Feb 2008
    • 16

    #2
    In Okou et al, the enrichment is ~1000 fold, but only 1 in 60 reads are in targeted region. In Albert et al, the enrichment is 153-418 fold, but 38-76% of reads are in targeted region.

    Could anybody comment why the percentage of reads mapped to targeted region is so low in Okou et al, but ok in Albert et al?

    Thanks!

    Comment

    • Michael L. Altshuler
      Member
      • Nov 2007
      • 14

      #3
      I wonder whether anybody has attempted to reverse the enrichment strategy, that is, to capture the repeats and let exons be washed off the microarray. The washed material could be expected to be enriched in exons and be further processed for sequencing.

      For all I know and can guess it could be a robust, efficient and inexpensive way of enrichment.

      Comment

      • sci_guy
        Member
        • Jan 2008
        • 83

        #4
        Interesting thought Michael.

        The hyb kinetics would change a great deal. For example if you designed a series of oligos around the human LINE1 repeat consensus sequence you are now trying to capture over 20% of the genome (LINE1 sequences) with your oligos instead of capturing a megabase or two of exons (~0.05% of the genome). A liquid phase capture using a small library of oligos bound to magnetic beads or suchlike which are designed around repeat consensus sequences might be the way to go.

        Comment

        • apfejes
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2008
          • 236

          #5
          That is interesting. For Solexa based applications, current alignment strategies don't handle repeats wel, and fragments aligning to repeats are most often thrown out - so the only significant advantage to removing these sequences might be in freeing up some additional capacity of a flow cell, eg, if you go from ~65% to 90% mappability of CFU.

          It might be worth a try, if that's the case.
          The more you know, the more you know you don't know. —Aristotle

          Comment

          • Michael L. Altshuler
            Member
            • Nov 2007
            • 14

            #6
            Density gradient centrifugation is another enrichment strategy

            Density gradient centrifugation would move most of the repeats to the satellite DNA peak(s).
            As an initial step in the enrichment process it could probably alleviate the needle-in-the-hay situation during the subsequent array-based enrichment for the unique DNA sequences or even replace the arrays. Opinions?

            Comment

            • mcraja
              Junior Member
              • Jan 2009
              • 1

              #7
              agilent sureselect on array capture

              We are using Agilent's SureSelect on array capture method and "reverse enrichment" is 50% of what actualy happens, the repeat regions are removed by the use of Cot1 DNA in the hyb buffer. The target regions are captured on the array, there is more than 1000 fold enrichment of targted regions and > 99% of the targted regions are typically captured and more than 50% of the sequence is from targeted exons.

              Raja
              (will be posting updates at www.nextgenseq.com)

              Originally posted by Michael L. Altshuler View Post
              I wonder whether anybody has attempted to reverse the enrichment strategy, that is, to capture the repeats and let exons be washed off the microarray. The washed material could be expected to be enriched in exons and be further processed for sequencing.

              For all I know and can guess it could be a robust, efficient and inexpensive way of enrichment.

              Comment

              Latest Articles

              Collapse

              • SEQadmin2
                From Collection to Sequencing: Why Sample Preparation and Preservation Define Sequencing Data
                by SEQadmin2


                Data variability is still an issue in sequencing technologies despite the advances in reproducibility and accuracy of these platforms. But the problem does not originate in the sequencing itself, but in the previous steps, before the sample reaches the sequencer.


                The first step is collection, followed by preservation and sample preparation for analysis. Most scientists overlook those steps, but not being careful might just be skewing the experiment’s results.
                ...
                Yesterday, 10:05 AM
              • SEQadmin2
                Single-Cell Sequencing at an Inflection Point: Early Impacts of New Platforms and Emerging Trends
                by SEQadmin2


                With the launch of new single-cell sequencing platforms in 2026, the field stands at an exciting inflection point. This article surveys the most impactful advances in the field and discusses how they’re reshaping research in cancer, immunology, and beyond.


                Introduction

                Single-cell sequencing technologies have undergone remarkable advances over the past decade, transitioning from low-throughput experimental approaches to highly scalable platforms capable of...
                05-22-2026, 06:42 AM
              • SEQadmin2
                Environmental Genomics in the Age of NGS: From Microbes to Conservation Strategies
                by SEQadmin2

                Studying ecosystems means dealing with complex, multi-species communities that are hard to observe at scale. This complexity, however, hides many important questions to be answered, from how biogeochemical cycles work and how climate change can affect species distribution to how conservation strategies can work best.


                Genomics, particularly since the expansion of NGS, has transformed ecosystem ecology. By sequencing environmental DNA, we can now assess biodiversity without direct...
                05-06-2026, 09:04 AM

              ad_right_rmr

              Collapse

              News

              Collapse

              Topics Statistics Last Post
              Started by SEQadmin2, Yesterday, 12:03 PM
              0 responses
              19 views
              0 reactions
              Last Post SEQadmin2  
              Started by SEQadmin2, Yesterday, 11:40 AM
              0 responses
              14 views
              0 reactions
              Last Post SEQadmin2  
              Started by SEQadmin2, 05-28-2026, 11:40 AM
              0 responses
              29 views
              0 reactions
              Last Post SEQadmin2  
              Started by SEQadmin2, 05-26-2026, 10:12 AM
              0 responses
              31 views
              0 reactions
              Last Post SEQadmin2  
              Working...