Investigation of chimeric reads using the MinION

F1000Res. 2017 May 5:6:631. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.11547.2. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Following a nanopore sequencing run of PCR products of three amplicons less than 1kb, an abundance of reads failed quality control due to template/complement mismatch. A BLAST search demonstrated that some of the failed reads mapped to two different genes -- an unexpected observation, given that PCR was carried out separately for each amplicon. A further investigation was carried out specifically to search for chimeric reads, using separate barcodes for each amplicon and trying two different ligation methods prior to sample loading. Despite the separation of ligation products, chimeric reads formed from different amplicons were still observed in the base-called sequence. The long-read nature of nanopore sequencing presents an effective tool for the discovery and filtering of chimeric reads. We have found that at least 1.7% of reads prepared using the Nanopore LSK002 2D Ligation Kit include post-amplification chimeric elements. This finding has potential implications for other amplicon sequencing technologies, as the process is unlikely to be specific to the sample preparation used for nanopore sequencing.

Keywords: MinION; R9.4; amplicon; chimerism; interferon; nanopore; signal.

Grants and funding

This work was funded in full by Health Research Council of NZ Independent Research Organization (IRO) funding to the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research (grant number HRC14/1003).