학술논문

Genome mapping on nanochannel arrays for structural variation analysis and sequence assembly
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Biotechnology. 30(8)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Bioengineering
Nanotechnology
Human Genome
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Generic health relevance
Base Sequence
Chromosome Mapping
Chromosomes
Artificial
Bacterial
Fluorescent Dyes
Haplotypes
Humans
Major Histocompatibility Complex
Microfluidic Analytical Techniques
Molecular Sequence Data
Nucleotide Motifs
Language
Abstract
We describe genome mapping on nanochannel arrays. In this approach, specific sequence motifs in single DNA molecules are fluorescently labeled, and the DNA molecules are uniformly stretched in thousands of silicon channels on a nanofluidic device. Fluorescence imaging allows the construction of maps of the physical distances between occurrences of the sequence motifs. We demonstrate the analysis, individually and as mixtures, of 95 bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones that cover the 4.7-Mb human major histocompatibility complex region. We obtain accurate, haplotype-resolved, sequence motif maps hundreds of kilobases in length, resulting in a median coverage of 114× for the BACs. The final sequence motif map assembly contains three contigs. With an average distance of 9 kb between labels, we detect 22 haplotype differences. We also use the sequence motif maps to provide scaffolds for de novo assembly of sequencing data. Nanochannel genome mapping should facilitate de novo assembly of sequencing reads from complex regions in diploid organisms, haplotype and structural variation analysis and comparative genomics.