Comparison of mitochondrial DNA variants detection using short- and long-read sequencing.
J Hum Genet
; 64(11): 1107-1116, 2019 Nov.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-31409854
The recent advent of long-read sequencing technologies is expected to provide reasonable answers to genetic challenges unresolvable by short-read sequencing, primarily the inability to accurately study structural variations, copy number variations, and homologous repeats in complex parts of the genome. However, long-read sequencing comes along with higher rates of random short deletions and insertions, and single nucleotide errors. The relatively higher sequencing accuracy of short-read sequencing has kept it as the first choice of screening for single nucleotide variants and short deletions and insertions. Albeit, short-read sequencing still suffers from systematic errors that tend to occur at specific positions where a high depth of reads is not always capable to correct for these errors. In this study, we compared the genotyping of mitochondrial DNA variants in three samples using PacBio's Sequel (Pacific Biosciences Inc., Menlo Park, CA, USA) long-read sequencing and illumina's HiSeqX10 (illumine Inc., San Diego, CA, USA) short-read sequencing data. We concluded that, despite the differences in the type and frequency of errors in the long-reads sequencing, its accuracy is still comparable to that of short-reads for genotyping short nuclear variants; due to the randomness of errors in long reads, a lower coverage, around 37 reads, can be sufficient to correct for these random errors.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
DNA, Mitochondrial
/
DNA Copy Number Variations
/
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Type of study:
Diagnostic_studies
Limits:
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
J Hum Genet
Journal subject:
GENETICA MEDICA
Year:
2019
Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Japan