AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers created a new sequencing method called PECC-Seq to enhance accuracy and cost-effectiveness in detecting ultra-rare mutations through a PCR-free duplex approach.
  • The method uses endogenous barcodes to correct sequencing errors and effectively identifies specific base substitution errors linked to mechanical fragmentation in DNA library preparation.
  • PECC-Seq demonstrated great potential by accurately detecting increased mutation frequencies in treated cells, while also helping to uncover error patterns that could improve other sequencing techniques.

Article Abstract

To improve the accuracy and the cost-efficiency of next-generation sequencing in ultralow-frequency mutation detection, we developed the Paired-End and Complementary Consensus Sequencing (PECC-Seq), a PCR-free duplex consensus sequencing approach. PECC-Seq employed shear points as endogenous barcodes to identify consensus sequences from the overlap in the shortened, complementary DNA strand-derived paired-end reads for sequencing error correction. With the high accuracy of PECC-Seq, we identified the characteristic base substitution errors introduced by the end-repair process of mechanical fragmentation-based library preparations, which were prominent at the terminal 7 bp of the library fragments in the 5'-NpCpA-3' and 5'-NpCpT-3' trinucleotide context. As demonstrated at the human genome scale (TK6 cells), after removing these potential end-repair artifacts from the terminal 7 bp, PECC-Seq could reduce the sequencing error frequency to mid-10 with a relatively low sequencing depth. For TA base pairs, the background error rate could be suppressed to mid-10. In mutagen-treated (6 μg/mL methyl methanesulfonate or 12 μg/mL N-nitroso-N-ethylurea) TK6, increases in mutagen treatment-related mutant frequencies could be detected, indicating the potential of PECC-Seq in detecting genome-wide ultra-rare mutations. In addition, our finding on the patterns of end-repair artifacts may provide new insights into further reducing technical errors not only for PECC-Seq, but also for other next-generation sequencing techniques.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00204-020-02832-0DOI Listing

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