Author:
Oliver John S.,Catalano Anthony,Davis Jennifer R.,Grinberg Boris S.,Hutchins Timothy E.,Kaiser Michael D.,Nurnberg Steve,Sage Jay M.,Seward Leah,Simelgor Gregory,Weiner Nathan K.,Bready Barrett
Abstract
With the advent of routine short-read genome sequencing has come a growing recognition of the importance of long-range, structural information in applications ranging from sequence assembly to the detection of structural variation. Here we describe the Nabsys solid-state detector capable of detecting tags on single molecules of DNA 100s of kilobases in length as they translocate through the detector at a velocity greater than 1 megabase pair per second. Sequence-specific tags are detected with a high signal-to-noise ratio. The physical distance between tags is determined after accounting for viscous drag-induced intramolecular velocity fluctuations. The accurate measurement of the physical distance between tags on each molecule and the ability of the detector to resolve distances between tags of less than 300 base-pairs enables the construction of high-density genome maps.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
5 articles.
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