Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing

Determination of the relative copy numbers of mixed molecular species in nucleic acid samples is often the objective of biological experiments, including Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP), indel and gene copy-number characterization, and quantification of CRISPR-Cas9 base editing, cytosine methyl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eyal Seroussi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Genes
Subjects:
SNP
CNV
CpG
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/12/2/283
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spelling doaj-aef43bddc0924223b326c5545aadaad32021-02-18T00:02:27ZengMDPI AGGenes2073-44252021-02-011228328310.3390/genes12020283Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger SequencingEyal Seroussi0Institute of Animal Science, Agricultural Research Organization (ARO), HaMaccabim Road, P.O.B 15159, Rishon LeTsiyon 7528809, IsraelDetermination of the relative copy numbers of mixed molecular species in nucleic acid samples is often the objective of biological experiments, including Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP), indel and gene copy-number characterization, and quantification of CRISPR-Cas9 base editing, cytosine methylation, and RNA editing. Standard dye-terminator chromatograms are a widely accessible, cost-effective information source from which copy-number proportions can be inferred. However, the rate of incorporation of dye terminators is dependent on the dye type, the adjacent sequence string, and the secondary structure of the sequenced strand. These variable rates complicate inferences and have driven scientists to resort to complex and costly quantification methods. Because these complex methods introduce their own biases, researchers are rethinking whether rectifying distortions in sequencing trace files and using direct sequencing for quantification will enable comparable accurate assessment. Indeed, recent developments in software tools (e.g., TIDE, ICE, EditR, BEEP and BEAT) indicate that quantification based on direct Sanger sequencing is gaining in scientific acceptance. This commentary reviews the common obstacles in quantification and the latest insights and developments relevant to estimating copy-number proportions based on direct Sanger sequencing, concluding that bidirectional sequencing and sophisticated base calling are the keys to identifying and avoiding sequence distortions.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/12/2/283dye-terminator DNA sequencingSNPCNVCpGbisulfite sequencingbase editor
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eyal Seroussi
spellingShingle Eyal Seroussi
Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing
Genes
dye-terminator DNA sequencing
SNP
CNV
CpG
bisulfite sequencing
base editor
author_facet Eyal Seroussi
author_sort Eyal Seroussi
title Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing
title_short Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing
title_full Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing
title_fullStr Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing
title_full_unstemmed Estimating Copy-Number Proportions: The Comeback of Sanger Sequencing
title_sort estimating copy-number proportions: the comeback of sanger sequencing
publisher MDPI AG
series Genes
issn 2073-4425
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Determination of the relative copy numbers of mixed molecular species in nucleic acid samples is often the objective of biological experiments, including Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP), indel and gene copy-number characterization, and quantification of CRISPR-Cas9 base editing, cytosine methylation, and RNA editing. Standard dye-terminator chromatograms are a widely accessible, cost-effective information source from which copy-number proportions can be inferred. However, the rate of incorporation of dye terminators is dependent on the dye type, the adjacent sequence string, and the secondary structure of the sequenced strand. These variable rates complicate inferences and have driven scientists to resort to complex and costly quantification methods. Because these complex methods introduce their own biases, researchers are rethinking whether rectifying distortions in sequencing trace files and using direct sequencing for quantification will enable comparable accurate assessment. Indeed, recent developments in software tools (e.g., TIDE, ICE, EditR, BEEP and BEAT) indicate that quantification based on direct Sanger sequencing is gaining in scientific acceptance. This commentary reviews the common obstacles in quantification and the latest insights and developments relevant to estimating copy-number proportions based on direct Sanger sequencing, concluding that bidirectional sequencing and sophisticated base calling are the keys to identifying and avoiding sequence distortions.
topic dye-terminator DNA sequencing
SNP
CNV
CpG
bisulfite sequencing
base editor
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/12/2/283
work_keys_str_mv AT eyalseroussi estimatingcopynumberproportionsthecomebackofsangersequencing
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