Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.

Targeted DNA enrichment coupled with next generation sequencing has been increasingly used for interrogation of select sub-genomic regions at high depth of coverage in a cost effective manner. Specificity measured by on-target efficiency is a key performance metric for target enrichment. Non-specifi...

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Main Authors: Zhenming Yu, Kajia Cao, Tanya Tischler, Catherine A Stolle, Avni B Santani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4110027?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-bb41ae6d86d4423ca952a296b34b6a512020-11-25T02:37:10ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0197e10349110.1371/journal.pone.0103491Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.Zhenming YuKajia CaoTanya TischlerCatherine A StolleAvni B SantaniTargeted DNA enrichment coupled with next generation sequencing has been increasingly used for interrogation of select sub-genomic regions at high depth of coverage in a cost effective manner. Specificity measured by on-target efficiency is a key performance metric for target enrichment. Non-specific capture leads to off-target reads, resulting in waste of sequencing throughput on irrelevant regions. Microdroplet-PCR allows simultaneous amplification of up to thousands of regions in the genome and is among the most commonly used strategies for target enrichment. Here we show that carryover of single-stranded template genomic DNA from microdroplet-PCR constitutes a major contributing factor for off-target reads in the resultant libraries. Moreover, treatment of microdroplet-PCR enrichment products with a nuclease specific to single-stranded DNA alleviates off-target load and improves enrichment specificity. We propose that nuclease treatment of enrichment products should be incorporated in the workflow of targeted sequencing using microdroplet-PCR for target capture. These findings may have a broad impact on other PCR based applications for which removal of template DNA is beneficial.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4110027?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhenming Yu
Kajia Cao
Tanya Tischler
Catherine A Stolle
Avni B Santani
spellingShingle Zhenming Yu
Kajia Cao
Tanya Tischler
Catherine A Stolle
Avni B Santani
Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Zhenming Yu
Kajia Cao
Tanya Tischler
Catherine A Stolle
Avni B Santani
author_sort Zhenming Yu
title Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.
title_short Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.
title_full Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.
title_fullStr Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.
title_full_unstemmed Mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-PCR based targeted DNA enrichment.
title_sort mung bean nuclease treatment increases capture specificity of microdroplet-pcr based targeted dna enrichment.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Targeted DNA enrichment coupled with next generation sequencing has been increasingly used for interrogation of select sub-genomic regions at high depth of coverage in a cost effective manner. Specificity measured by on-target efficiency is a key performance metric for target enrichment. Non-specific capture leads to off-target reads, resulting in waste of sequencing throughput on irrelevant regions. Microdroplet-PCR allows simultaneous amplification of up to thousands of regions in the genome and is among the most commonly used strategies for target enrichment. Here we show that carryover of single-stranded template genomic DNA from microdroplet-PCR constitutes a major contributing factor for off-target reads in the resultant libraries. Moreover, treatment of microdroplet-PCR enrichment products with a nuclease specific to single-stranded DNA alleviates off-target load and improves enrichment specificity. We propose that nuclease treatment of enrichment products should be incorporated in the workflow of targeted sequencing using microdroplet-PCR for target capture. These findings may have a broad impact on other PCR based applications for which removal of template DNA is beneficial.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4110027?pdf=render
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AT tanyatischler mungbeannucleasetreatmentincreasescapturespecificityofmicrodropletpcrbasedtargeteddnaenrichment
AT catherineastolle mungbeannucleasetreatmentincreasescapturespecificityofmicrodropletpcrbasedtargeteddnaenrichment
AT avnibsantani mungbeannucleasetreatmentincreasescapturespecificityofmicrodropletpcrbasedtargeteddnaenrichment
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