Human chromosome 16 features one of the highest levels of segmentally duplicated sequence among the human autosomes. We report here the 78,884,754 base pairs of finished chromosome 16 sequence, representing over 99.9% of its euchromatin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere we describe further development of our method of DNA sequencing by Differential Extension with Nucleotide Subsets (DENS) and its application to the sequencing of human genomic DNA and full-insert cDNA. Essentially, DENS is primer walking without custom primer synthesis; instead, DENS uses a presynthesized library of octamer primers degenerate in two positions (4,096 tubes/sequences for a complete library). DENS converts an octamer selected from this library into a long primer on the template, at the intended site only.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere we analyze the effect of DNA folding on the performance of short primers and describe a simple technique for assessing hitherto uncertain values of thermodynamic parameters that determine the folding of single-stranded DNA into secondary structure. An 8mer with two degenerate positions is extended simultaneously at several complementary sites on a known template (M13mp18) using one, two or three (but never all four) of the possible dNTPs. The length of the extension is site specific because it is limited by the first occurrence in the downstream template sequence of a base whose complementary dNTP is not present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
February 1997
Here we describe template directed enzymatic synthesis of unique primers, avoiding the chemical synthesis step in primer walking. We have termed this conceptually new technique DENS (differential extension with nucleotide subsets). DENS works by selectively extending a short primer, making it a long one at the intended site only.
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