Evaluation of a Transposase Protocol for Rapid Generation of Shotgun High-Throughput Sequencing Libraries from Nanogram Quantities of DNA

Author:

Marine Rachel1,Polson Shawn W.1,Ravel Jacques2,Hatfull Graham3,Russell Daniel3,Sullivan Matthew4,Syed Fraz5,Dumas Michael1,Wommack K. Eric1

Affiliation:

1. University of Delaware, Delaware Biotechnology Institute, Newark, Delaware 19711

2. University of Maryland School of Medicine, Institute for Genome Sciences, Baltimore, Maryland 21201

3. University of Pittsburg, Department of Biological Sciences, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260

4. University of Arizona, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Deptartment, Tucson, Arizona 85721

5. Epicenter Biotechnologies, Madison, Wisconsin 53713

Abstract

ABSTRACT Construction of DNA fragment libraries for next-generation sequencing can prove challenging, especially for samples with low DNA yield. Protocols devised to circumvent the problems associated with low starting quantities of DNA can result in amplification biases that skew the distribution of genomes in metagenomic data. Moreover, sample throughput can be slow, as current library construction techniques are time-consuming. This study evaluated Nextera, a new transposon-based method that is designed for quick production of DNA fragment libraries from a small quantity of DNA. The sequence read distribution across nine phage genomes in a mock viral assemblage met predictions for six of the least-abundant phages; however, the rank order of the most abundant phages differed slightly from predictions. De novo genome assemblies from Nextera libraries provided long contigs spanning over half of the phage genome; in four cases where full-length genome sequences were available for comparison, consensus sequences were found to match over 99% of the genome with near-perfect identity. Analysis of areas of low and high sequence coverage within phage genomes indicated that GC content may influence coverage of sequences from Nextera libraries. Comparisons of phage genomes prepared using both Nextera and a standard 454 FLX Titanium library preparation protocol suggested that the coverage biases according to GC content observed within the Nextera libraries were largely attributable to bias in the Nextera protocol rather than to the 454 sequencing technology. Nevertheless, given suitable sequence coverage, the Nextera protocol produced high-quality data for genomic studies. For metagenomics analyses, effects of GC amplification bias would need to be considered; however, the library preparation standardization that Nextera provides should benefit comparative metagenomic analyses.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

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