Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 5' end adapter contamination

    Hey All, I just have a general question. I am dealing with reads generated from illumina and am seeing the 5' adapter in many reads. Why would this occur? would it be a result of mis-annealing of the PCR primer?

    Thanks for any help
    Leanne

  • #2
    Hi Leanne,

    How did you generate your libraries? Which protocol or kit did you use?

    Comment


    • #3
      At least there could be two reasons. If adapter dimers formed during PCR was not cleaned up properly, they will cluster during bridge amplification and sequenced. This type will result in reads which are all adapter sequences followed by predominantly A residues if sequencing cycle was longer than adapter length. Other reason would be where insert length is shorter than cycle number so all or part of adapter is also sequenced.

      Comment


      • #4
        Get rid of those reads

        Originally posted by nucacidhunter View Post
        Other reason would be where insert length is shorter than cycle number so all or part of adapter is also sequenced.
        I might be wrong but I think that when this happens it's the 3' that we see with adapter contamination and this is normal. I've also had Illumina sequenced reads come with adapter contamination at the 5' and at the sequencing facility they where unable to explain how this happened. They suggested removing all reads with this contamination. For me the % was low enough to afford losing them against messing up the assembly. I used TRIMMOMATIC to clean up the reads. You can provide an adapter.fasta file and you can include all Illumina adapters just in case. In my reads there was adapter-index-polyA contamination and when I googled the sequence it came up as RNA-Seq adapter and I was doing WGS.

        My libraries were built with Truseq PCR-free kit.

        Regards

        Comment

        Latest Articles

        Collapse

        • seqadmin
          Current Approaches to Protein Sequencing
          by seqadmin


          Proteins are often described as the workhorses of the cell, and identifying their sequences is key to understanding their role in biological processes and disease. Currently, the most common technique used to determine protein sequences is mass spectrometry. While still a valuable tool, mass spectrometry faces several limitations and requires a highly experienced scientist familiar with the equipment to operate it. Additionally, other proteomic methods, like affinity assays, are constrained...
          04-04-2024, 04:25 PM
        • seqadmin
          Strategies for Sequencing Challenging Samples
          by seqadmin


          Despite advancements in sequencing platforms and related sample preparation technologies, certain sample types continue to present significant challenges that can compromise sequencing results. Pedro Echave, Senior Manager of the Global Business Segment at Revvity, explained that the success of a sequencing experiment ultimately depends on the amount and integrity of the nucleic acid template (RNA or DNA) obtained from a sample. “The better the quality of the nucleic acid isolated...
          03-22-2024, 06:39 AM

        ad_right_rmr

        Collapse

        News

        Collapse

        Topics Statistics Last Post
        Started by seqadmin, 04-11-2024, 12:08 PM
        0 responses
        18 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Started by seqadmin, 04-10-2024, 10:19 PM
        0 responses
        22 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Started by seqadmin, 04-10-2024, 09:21 AM
        0 responses
        16 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Started by seqadmin, 04-04-2024, 09:00 AM
        0 responses
        47 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Working...
        X