Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Confused about read duplicates after adapter ligation

    Recently I am working on developing new methods for NGS PE library preparation. I am confused about PCR duplicates. It is obvious that duplicates will arise during PCR amplification dealing with low DNA input. How ever, when I think about PCR-free library preparation, one double-stranded DNA molecule is ligated 2 Y adapters at both left and right side. This results in 2 different single strand products:
    1. 5'-P5 - plus strand insert ssDNA -P7'-3'
    2. 3'-P7'- minus strand insert ssDNA -P5-5'

    These 2 single strand products are actually duplicates since the insert ssDNA are fully complementary to each other and they could be both ligated to flow cell. This means even for PCR-free library, 50% of the reads are duplicates, theoretically both strand from one ds-DNA could be sequenced. however, when I dealt with fastq file after sequencing, the percentage of duplicates was much lower than 50%, as for PCR-free library, there was nearly no duplicates. Can anybody help me about this ?

  • #2
    One read pair will be the reverse-complement of the other read-pair. So they will not be considered "duplicates".
    Also, even if your software did consider these to be "duplicates" not all amplicon strands cluster. Various flowcells have different efficiencies.

    If you cluster about 100ul of a 20pM library in one lane of a HiSeq 2500 you would get about 150-220 million pass filter clusters. To a first approximation "pM" is millions of molecules/ul. So about 2 billion molecules of your library would go into a HiSeq 2500 lane. So only about 20% actually cluster. So your chance of clustering both strands from a given amplicon would be 4%.

    I think most other Illumina instruments cluster at a lower efficiency than than the HiSeq 2500.

    --
    Phillip

    Comment

    Latest Articles

    Collapse

    • seqadmin
      Best Practices for Single-Cell Sequencing Analysis
      by seqadmin



      While isolating and preparing single cells for sequencing was historically the bottleneck, recent technological advancements have shifted the challenge to data analysis. This highlights the rapidly evolving nature of single-cell sequencing. The inherent complexity of single-cell analysis has intensified with the surge in data volume and the incorporation of diverse and more complex datasets. This article explores the challenges in analysis, examines common pitfalls, offers...
      Yesterday, 07:15 AM
    • seqadmin
      Latest Developments in Precision Medicine
      by seqadmin



      Technological advances have led to drastic improvements in the field of precision medicine, enabling more personalized approaches to treatment. This article explores four leading groups that are overcoming many of the challenges of genomic profiling and precision medicine through their innovative platforms and technologies.

      Somatic Genomics
      “We have such a tremendous amount of genetic diversity that exists within each of us, and not just between us as individuals,”...
      05-24-2024, 01:16 PM

    ad_right_rmr

    Collapse

    News

    Collapse

    Topics Statistics Last Post
    Started by seqadmin, Today, 06:58 AM
    0 responses
    11 views
    0 likes
    Last Post seqadmin  
    Started by seqadmin, Yesterday, 08:18 AM
    0 responses
    17 views
    0 likes
    Last Post seqadmin  
    Started by seqadmin, Yesterday, 08:04 AM
    0 responses
    16 views
    0 likes
    Last Post seqadmin  
    Started by seqadmin, 06-03-2024, 06:55 AM
    0 responses
    13 views
    0 likes
    Last Post seqadmin  
    Working...
    X