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  • GenoMax
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2008
    • 7142

    HiSeq 4000 index swaps

    I was recently made aware of a potential problem that supposedly can result in index misassignments with HiSeq 4000 (under certain experimental conditions). James Hadfield wrote about this a few months back. This may be generally applicable for all ExAmp chemistry instruments.

    Since I have not seen this discussed here/elsewhere online I wanted to see if people have seen this in your data.
    Last edited by GenoMax; 04-04-2017, 09:17 AM.
  • SNPsaurus
    Registered Vendor
    • May 2013
    • 525

    #2
    Here's a preprint about it: http://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/04/09/125724
    Providing nextRAD genotyping and PacBio sequencing services. http://snpsaurus.com

    Comment

    • gringer
      David Eccles (gringer)
      • May 2011
      • 845

      #3
      There's also this thread.

      Comment

      • GenoMax
        Senior Member
        • Feb 2008
        • 7142

        #4
        Originally posted by gringer View Post
        There's also this thread.
        Thanks for the reminder @ginger.

        Comment

        • ECO
          --Site Admin--
          • Oct 2007
          • 1360

          #5
          Anyone doing significant multiplexing should be using dual indicies, which reduces this problem dramatically (making swapped reads go to Undetermined while demultiplexing).

          Interested to see if this is a problem in our novaseq runs...will update if I note something.

          Comment

          • gringer
            David Eccles (gringer)
            • May 2011
            • 845

            #6
            That's dual indexes using the same index at both ends.

            Comment

            • DNATECH
              Member
              • Mar 2015
              • 31

              #7
              It is great that the Biorxiv manuscript from the Weissman lab has hopefully identified the cause of the problem which has been reported previously for some cases (the agent being "free barcoded primers" present in the library).
              However, the scary index-swapping rates were seemingly generated from low-quality library preps with high primer contamination. I am aware that for their specific application (single-cell SMRT-seq) one can't be choosy with regards to the library quality. For any other application these libraries should have failed the QC. The free primers could and should have been easily drastically reduced by an additional magnetic bead cleanup for their first experiment. It is nice that we get to benefit from this mishap now.

              I have posted my thoughts here: http://dnatech.genomecenter.ucdavis....ignment-issue/

              Obviously these data ask for caution for any multiplexed sequencing projects and for protocol adjustments.
              To some degree the manuscript shows: Ugly things can happen if one sequences really ugly libraries.
              How relevant is this to the sequencing of high-quality and clean libraries? The observed linear correlation between between primer spike-ins and artifact rate indicates, to me, that there is no reason to panic.

              Lutz

              Comment

              • SNPsaurus
                Registered Vendor
                • May 2013
                • 525

                #8
                Good post, DNATECH. People are definitely overstating things on twitter, "10% reads misassigned on HS4000" without noting the caveats--this type of swap only happens when the primer contains indices, the paper used highly multiplexed samples where the read count per sample was low and the number of other samples that could contribute to crosstalk was high, and the prep (as you noted) lended itself to this issue.

                I think it is also important to note that other forms of index swapping can occur (PCR of pooled libraries, for example).
                Providing nextRAD genotyping and PacBio sequencing services. http://snpsaurus.com

                Comment

                • nucacidhunter
                  Jafar Jabbari
                  • Jan 2013
                  • 1250

                  #9
                  Treating final PCR reactions (for library preps using Nextera, NEBNext line of kits, 10X Genomics and some other mentioned in DNATECH blog) with ExoSAP-IT or ssDNA nucleases such as Exonuclease1 should digest remaining PCR primers and can be adapted as an add-on before bead clean up.

                  Edit: Exonuclease VII also can be used to cleave primers and single stranded region of adapters.
                  Last edited by nucacidhunter; 05-14-2017, 07:30 PM. Reason: Added more information

                  Comment

                  • DNATECH
                    Member
                    • Mar 2015
                    • 31

                    #10
                    nucacidhunter, this is definitely worth a try! (Is seemingly clean - according to BA - good enough?)

                    I agree SNPsaurus the problem is more complex.

                    Originally posted by nucacidhunter View Post
                    Treating final PCR reactions (for library preps using Nextera, NEBNext line of kits, 10X Genomics and some other mentioned in DNATECH blog) with ExoSAP-IT or ssDNA nucleases such as Exonuclease1 should digest remaining PCR primers and can be adapted as an add-on before bead clean up.

                    Comment

                    • Olaf Blue
                      Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 58

                      #11
                      Treatment of PCR products with Exo I/EXOSAP/Antarctic Phosphatase for primer removal is an old trick and works very well.

                      Comment

                      • nucacidhunter
                        Jafar Jabbari
                        • Jan 2013
                        • 1250

                        #12
                        Originally posted by DNATECH View Post
                        (Is seemingly clean - according to BA - good enough?)
                        It depends on:
                        1- Primer length that should be long enough not to blend with lower marker of the Chip or Tape. A 50 base long primer would blend with HSD5000 Tape lower marker but not with HSD1000 one
                        2- Sensitivity of Chip or Tape that should be high sensitivity type capable of detecting low concentrations

                        It should also be possible to Exo treat the library pool rather than treating each individual library

                        Comment

                        • nucacidhunter
                          Jafar Jabbari
                          • Jan 2013
                          • 1250

                          #13
                          Illumina’s white paper on index misassignment:

                          Comment

                          • GenoMax
                            Senior Member
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 7142

                            #14
                            Originally posted by nucacidhunter View Post
                            Illumina’s white paper on index misassignment:

                            https://www.illumina.com/content/dam...inkId=36607862
                            Thank you @nucacidhunter.

                            Comment

                            • gringer
                              David Eccles (gringer)
                              • May 2011
                              • 845

                              #15
                              1.5% index hopping with no adapters spiked in. Does that mean anything?

                              Comment

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