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  • Twin peaks, double peaks, double humps of RNA Seq, it’s all very frustrating...HELP!

    Method:

    Wang et al. 2011, A low-cost library construction protocol for Illumina-based strand-specific multiplex rna-seq. PLoS One 6(10) e26426. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0026426

    Basics steps:

    Extract Total RNA
    Extract mRNA
    Fragment
    1st strand synthesis
    2nd strand synthesis
    End repair
    dA-Tail
    Ligate adaptors
    Size select
    Excise dUTP
    Amplify
    Bioanalyze with DNA HS Chip

    Problem:

    Bioanalysis with a DNA HS Chip, reveals a double hump in every library product.



    Notes:

    Libraries are individual i.e. not yet pooled.
    Yes Library 11 has a ~126bp adaptor dimer (already fixed).
    100ng mRNA input
    Qubit after cDNA synthesis (2nd strand) yields on average 8-10ng total
    Qubit after final library completion, anything from 8-30ng total from 14 cycles.
    Amplification step is definitely working (trace not shown).
    I made many more libraries with this method and the double humps just keep on coming.

    Questions:
    1. What is happening here, any theories?
    2. How do I fix this?


    EDIT - 26 Nov 13

    Guys I don't believe the double hump problems are related to the following examples:



    PCR artifacts are normally twice the expected library size as shown in the image above. Since my libraries are between 200-500bp which is exactly the expected size I don't believe my results are PCR artifact related, but I'm happy to be proven wrong. Notice in my samples the double humps are within the main library peak and not two separate peaks.



    There is definitely no indication of bead carry over in my traces.




    Things I have tried but made no difference:
    • Denaturing the libraries multiple different ways to prevent bird nesting or this so called “bubble effect” as suggested in other posts
    • I have tried re-amplifying my libraries for another 2 more cycles as suggest in other posts
    • Tried 12x, 13x, 14x, 15x, 16x, 17x cycles.
    Last edited by AndyG; 11-25-2013, 06:45 PM. Reason: More information added

  • #2
    In my experience, the double hump is the result of over amplification during your final PCR step. I would try 12 cycles instead of 14 and see if that gets rid of the second hump.

    Comment


    • #3
      The double peak is often a "bubble peak," which is often seen when you do lots of rounds of PCR. Basically, two strands of DNA have annealed that don't match in the middle so they bubble out and run strangely on the Bioanalyzer chip. It's not a problem for Illumina instruments (I don't know about others) because your DNA is denatured before loading.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by ZWB View Post
        In my experience, the double hump is the result of over amplification during your final PCR step. I would try 12 cycles instead of 14 and see if that gets rid of the second hump.
        Originally posted by microgirl123 View Post
        The double peak is often a "bubble peak," which is often seen when you do lots of rounds of PCR. Basically, two strands of DNA have annealed that don't match in the middle so they bubble out and run strangely on the Bioanalyzer chip. It's not a problem for Illumina instruments (I don't know about others) because your DNA is denatured before loading.

        Thanks guys, I just updated my first post with a little bit more information to clarify things.

        Comment


        • #5
          Anybody have any ideas?

          I have seen some people with the same problem on this forum but never a solution.

          Has anyone sequenced libraries with these double humps within the main library peak?

          Comment


          • #6
            I work with the illumina TruSeq DNA kit (with gDNA to start with) and I have seen the double peaks (in all variations) a lot. Have done lots of samples on the HiSeq and some on the MiSeq as well, but never had any problems sequencing.

            Comment


            • #7
              With truseqRNA I often see these libreries traces but I always sequence them with no problem.
              That's what Illumina suggests:

              How to fix bubble products
              To confirm this phenotype re-anneal the library slowly:
              1. Denature the library by heating to 95 degrees
              2. Slowly re-nature by cooling a degree a minute in a thermocycler by removing a heat block from an incubator and allowing it to cool to room temperature
              The bubble products will often resolve into normal double-stranded library
              In any case also without denaturation they are ok to be used and sequenced

              Comment


              • #8
                AndyG, I know this post is a little bit late, but were you able to find out the problem? I've been getting these double peaks for my Illumina ChIP-seq preps and they are not artifacts or bubble products (they persist through denaturation and run similar on a RNA bioA chip). These fragments do not amplify during qPCR and also do not sequence, but yet are somehow amplified enough during library prep to appear as a significant peak. We are using a pippin prep to size select (which works extremely well) and these peaks appear outside our selected size range.

                Comment


                • #9
                  double peaks

                  Hi guys,
                  how to quantify those "double peak" results in the bioanalyzer? Take both peaks together or just measure the first one?

                  Is it possible to do a Kappa quantification? Should be not a problem, right? Qubit measurements I should not trust, I guess. Same as nanodrop.
                  Any thoughts on that?

                  thx
                  D

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by drops View Post
                    Hi guys,
                    how to quantify those "double peak" results in the bioanalyzer? Take both peaks together or just measure the first one?

                    Is it possible to do a Kappa quantification? Should be not a problem, right? Qubit measurements I should not trust, I guess. Same as nanodrop.
                    Any thoughts on that?

                    thx
                    D
                    Yeah, if you are going to do qPCR, ignore the second peak. Use the small peak for the amplicon size. It works fine.

                    But normally it is better to just cut back on your PCR cycles if you start seeing these.

                    --
                    Phillip

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by AndyG View Post
                      Method:

                      Wang et al. 2011, A low-cost library construction protocol for Illumina-based strand-specific multiplex rna-seq. PLoS One 6(10) e26426. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0026426

                      Basics steps:

                      Extract Total RNA
                      Extract mRNA
                      Fragment
                      1st strand synthesis
                      2nd strand synthesis
                      End repair
                      dA-Tail
                      Ligate adaptors
                      Size select
                      Excise dUTP
                      Amplify
                      Bioanalyze with DNA HS Chip

                      Problem:

                      Bioanalysis with a DNA HS Chip, reveals a double hump in every library product.



                      Notes:

                      Libraries are individual i.e. not yet pooled.
                      Yes Library 11 has a ~126bp adaptor dimer (already fixed).
                      100ng mRNA input
                      Qubit after cDNA synthesis (2nd strand) yields on average 8-10ng total
                      Qubit after final library completion, anything from 8-30ng total from 14 cycles.
                      Amplification step is definitely working (trace not shown).
                      I made many more libraries with this method and the double humps just keep on coming.

                      Questions:
                      1. What is happening here, any theories?
                      2. How do I fix this?


                      EDIT - 26 Nov 13



                      PCR artifacts are normally twice the expected library size as shown in the image above. Since my libraries are between 200-500bp which is exactly the expected size I don't believe my results are PCR artifact related, but I'm happy to be proven wrong. Notice in my samples the double humps are within the main library peak and not two separate peaks.

                      [...]

                      Things I have tried but made no difference:
                      • Denaturing the libraries multiple different ways to prevent bird nesting or this so called “bubble effect” as suggested in other posts
                      • I have tried re-amplifying my libraries for another 2 more cycles as suggest in other posts
                      • Tried 12x, 13x, 14x, 15x, 16x, 17x cycles.
                      I don't think there is much chance that "AndyG" is still monitoring this thread, but just in case anyone reading this now would be helped:

                      Those double peaks are almost certainly a main peak and a "bubble product" peak. AndyG's protestations to the contrary suggest he doesn't get the concept.

                      Bubble products are said to form when adapters from 2 product strands anneal to each other. Because a great number of different inserts will comprise a library, it is unlikely that any 2 product strands will be complementary in the middle. So you end up with the "bubble product", a molecule annealed and double stranded at either end but the non-complementary middle section remains as a double single-strand "bubble" domain.

                      As you might imagine, this floppy thing migrates more slowly than its more compact fully double-stranded brethren. An Agilent chip will not correctly estimate its molecular weight by a variable amount. The fact that the two peaks overlap one another is not a sign that one is not a bubble peak.

                      Normally bubble peaks cause no issues for sequencing as long as you use qPCR to estimate the concentration of your libraries.

                      But, if you see bubble peaks, it is an indication that your PCR primer concentration has become limiting in the PCR reaction. At high primer concentrations, the primer annealing to a product strand will be kinetically favored over two product strands annealing.

                      Strand melting your library and allowing the strands to find their correct complements is a waste of time. Don't do that.

                      If you can't stand the idea of bubble products in you sample, you could probable get rid of most of them by adding your library to a fresh PCR reaction, with lots of primer and then doing a single cycle -- starting with a denaturation. This would allow the high amounts of primers to anneal and be extended into a double-stranded product.

                      But this is also a waste of time. Again, the bubble products don't actually cause problems.

                      They are an indication that you used more PCR cycles than were necessary. So you could cut back the number of cycles next time you made libraries.

                      --
                      Phillip

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        It's a heteroduplex. Decades ago people used heteroduplex analysis for mutation screening.

                        Double-stranded DNA is not a completely straight rigid rod. Sequence variations can cause bends in the double helix, or even alter the basic structure of the helix. A bend or kink in the DNA restricts its mobility through a sieving matrix, as the bent molecule presents a larger projected area to the gel pores. A…

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by NextGenSeq View Post
                          It's a heteroduplex. Decades ago people used heteroduplex analysis for mutation screening.

                          https://www.nationaldiagnostics.com/...uplex-analysis
                          Uh, I think you are pushing the boundaries of the definition of "heteroduplex" here. But, same idea as far as migration goes. The large area of non-duplex double stranded DNA in the middle of the amplicon would be expected to retard migration though the matrix.

                          Of course this is largely supposition. I haven't seen anyone actually test the "bubble product" hypothesis by digesting a double peak sample with something like S1 nuclease to show that the 2nd peak disappears and is replaced by a large amount of annealed adapter ends 60bp peak.

                          Initially I had assumed that the retarded band was from "daisy chains" of products that were largely double stranded, but associated with each other by annealing at their adapters. That still seems like a possibility to me.

                          --
                          Phillip

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Hi pmiguel
                            I always find your post so helpful!!
                            Indeed, I would like to ask just one more clarification about the second HMW peak "bubble product" appearing in my ChIP-seq libraries prep as well...
                            You stressed more times that it shouldn´t be an issue for sequencing using Illumina platforms, as long as the quantification is performed by qPCR.
                            I´ve submitted my ChIP-seq libraries but it didn´t work out so good (very low cluster density...). I´m afraid the problem might be the quantification step: I´ve quantified them by Qubit, because our facility requests this kind of quantification (our facility has never optimized the flow cell loading based on qPCR...).
                            Could you give me some more hints about qPCR quantification vs Qubit!?
                            I´m struggling since too long with this ChIP-seq...I need to make it work!!!
                            Thank you!
                            Emilia

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Hi Emilia,
                              It is strange that your cluster density is too low. Are you sure that it is really too low? When you really overload a lane the cluster-calling software is overwhelmed and can report a low density.

                              How to tell the difference between a truly low cluster density and an a badly overclustered lane? If it is truly low cluster density, usually your pass-filter% and overall quality values will be very high. If your lane was massively over-clustered then the pass-filter % and quality values will be low.

                              Here is why I think you may have over-clustered. If you take a library with a large component of "bubble-products" and check its concentration with a fluorimeter using a double-strand-specific dye, then the bubble products will be under-reported, right? The central portion of each bubble product amplicon will have completely un-annealed central portions and thus be effectively single-stranded. However these bubble products each contain 2 amplicons, each capable of clustering. This should cause you to underestimate the true concentration of your library using a Qubit if a large amount of your library is bubble products.

                              Of course this is all wanton speculation on my part. There are a dozen other factors I don't know about that could be causing your issue.

                              --
                              Phillip

                              Comment

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