Hello!
We are performing a metagenomics study in which we are characterizing bacterial diversity in clinical bone marrow specimens. I have extracted the DNA using Trizol LS.
We are basing our protocol on Caporaso et al. (2011), using the v4 16s primers 515f/806r. I ordered the primers sans the barcodes and adapters to ensure that we are able to amplify bacterial 16s in our samples prior to committing to this protocol. When I run the 16s PCR on my samples I get multiple bands - the brightest of which is about 100 bp smaller than the amplicon should be. I sanger sequenced this product and it seems to be human mitochondrial DNA. There is also a very faint band of the correct size and a faint band somewhere around 500 bp. I'm very hesitant to move forward with sequencing products containing multiple bands, as I don't want to waste coverage. Has anyone else had this problem with clinical samples?
Many thanks!!
We are performing a metagenomics study in which we are characterizing bacterial diversity in clinical bone marrow specimens. I have extracted the DNA using Trizol LS.
We are basing our protocol on Caporaso et al. (2011), using the v4 16s primers 515f/806r. I ordered the primers sans the barcodes and adapters to ensure that we are able to amplify bacterial 16s in our samples prior to committing to this protocol. When I run the 16s PCR on my samples I get multiple bands - the brightest of which is about 100 bp smaller than the amplicon should be. I sanger sequenced this product and it seems to be human mitochondrial DNA. There is also a very faint band of the correct size and a faint band somewhere around 500 bp. I'm very hesitant to move forward with sequencing products containing multiple bands, as I don't want to waste coverage. Has anyone else had this problem with clinical samples?
Many thanks!!
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