A comparison of single molecule and amplification based sequencing of cancer transcriptomes

  • Lee T. Sam
  • , Doron Lipson
  • , Tal Raz
  • , Xuhong Cao
  • , John Thompson
  • , Patrice M. Milos
  • , Dan Robinson
  • , Arul M. Chinnaiyan
  • , Chandan Kumar-Sinha
  • , Christopher A. Maher

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

42 Scopus citations

Abstract

The second wave of next generation sequencing technologies, referred to as single-molecule sequencing (SMS), carries the promise of profiling samples directly without employing polymerase chain reaction steps used by amplification-based sequencing (AS) methods. To examine the merits of both technologies, we examine mRNA sequencing results from single-molecule and amplification-based sequencing in a set of human cancer cell lines and tissues. We observe a characteristic coverage bias towards high abundance transcripts in amplification-based sequencing. A larger fraction of AS reads cover highly expressed genes, such as those associated with translational processes and housekeeping genes, resulting in relatively lower coverage of genes at low and mid-level abundance. In contrast, the coverage of high abundance transcripts plateaus off using SMS. Consequently, SMS is able to sequence lower- abundance transcripts more thoroughly, including some that are undetected by AS methods; however, these include many more mapping artifacts. A better understanding of the technical and analytical factors introducing platform specific biases in high throughput transcriptome sequencing applications will be critical in cross platform meta-analytic studies.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere17305
JournalPloS one
Volume6
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2011

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