Patent classifications
C12Q2535/119
METHODS OF SEQUENCING CIRCULAR TEMPLATE POLYNUCLEOTIDES
Disclosed herein, inter alia, are complexes, kits, and efficient methods of sequencing two strands of a double stranded polynucleotide.
METHODS OF SEQUENCING CIRCULAR TEMPLATE POLYNUCLEOTIDES
Disclosed herein, inter alia, are complexes, kits, and efficient methods of sequencing two strands of a double stranded polynucleotide.
METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR SEQUENCING DOUBLE STRANDED NUCLEIC ACIDS
A method for determining sequences from sense and antisense strands of a nucleic acid, including (a) providing a nucleic acid cluster attached to a solid support, wherein the nucleic acid cluster includes a sense strand and an antisense strand of a concatemer, the concatemer including multiple copies of a sequence unit, the sequence unit including a target sequence and a primer binding site; (b) hybridizing a primer to a primer binding site in the antisense strand; (c) extending the primer along the antisense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the antisense strand; (d) hybridizing a second primer to a primer binding site in the sense strand; and (e) extending the second primer along the sense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the sense strand.
METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR SEQUENCING DOUBLE STRANDED NUCLEIC ACIDS
A method for determining sequences from sense and antisense strands of a nucleic acid, including (a) providing a nucleic acid cluster attached to a solid support, wherein the nucleic acid cluster includes a sense strand and an antisense strand of a concatemer, the concatemer including multiple copies of a sequence unit, the sequence unit including a target sequence and a primer binding site; (b) hybridizing a primer to a primer binding site in the antisense strand; (c) extending the primer along the antisense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the antisense strand; (d) hybridizing a second primer to a primer binding site in the sense strand; and (e) extending the second primer along the sense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the sense strand.
METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR SEQUENCING COMPLEMENTARY POLYNUCLEOTIDES
Disclosed herein, inter alia, are substrates, kits, and efficient methods of preparing and sequencing two or more regions of a double-stranded polynucleotide.
METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR SEQUENCING COMPLEMENTARY POLYNUCLEOTIDES
Disclosed herein, inter alia, are substrates, kits, and efficient methods of preparing and sequencing two or more regions of a double-stranded polynucleotide.
Methods of lowering the error rate of massively parallel DNA sequencing using duplex consensus sequencing
Next Generation DNA sequencing promises to revolutionize clinical medicine and basic research. However, while this technology has the capacity to generate hundreds of billions of nucleotides of DNA sequence in a single experiment, the error rate of approximately 1% results in hundreds of millions of sequencing mistakes. These scattered errors can be tolerated in some applications but become extremely problematic when “deep sequencing” genetically heterogeneous mixtures, such as tumors or mixed microbial populations. To overcome limitations in sequencing accuracy, a method Duplex Consensus Sequencing (DCS) is provided. This approach greatly reduces errors by independently tagging and sequencing each of the two strands of a DNA duplex. As the two strands are complementary, true mutations are found at the same position in both strands. In contrast, PCR or sequencing errors will result in errors in only one strand. This method uniquely capitalizes on the redundant information stored in double-stranded DNA, thus overcoming technical limitations of prior methods utilizing data from only one of the two strands.
Methods of lowering the error rate of massively parallel DNA sequencing using duplex consensus sequencing
Next Generation DNA sequencing promises to revolutionize clinical medicine and basic research. However, while this technology has the capacity to generate hundreds of billions of nucleotides of DNA sequence in a single experiment, the error rate of approximately 1% results in hundreds of millions of sequencing mistakes. These scattered errors can be tolerated in some applications but become extremely problematic when “deep sequencing” genetically heterogeneous mixtures, such as tumors or mixed microbial populations. To overcome limitations in sequencing accuracy, a method Duplex Consensus Sequencing (DCS) is provided. This approach greatly reduces errors by independently tagging and sequencing each of the two strands of a DNA duplex. As the two strands are complementary, true mutations are found at the same position in both strands. In contrast, PCR or sequencing errors will result in errors in only one strand. This method uniquely capitalizes on the redundant information stored in double-stranded DNA, thus overcoming technical limitations of prior methods utilizing data from only one of the two strands.
Methods and compositions for sequencing double stranded nucleic acids using RCA and MDA
A method for determining sequences from sense and antisense strands of a nucleic acid, including (a) providing a nucleic acid cluster attached to a solid support, wherein the nucleic acid cluster includes a sense strand and an antisense strand of a concatemer, the concatemer including multiple copies of a sequence unit, the sequence unit including a target sequence and a primer binding site; (b) hybridizing a primer to a primer binding site in the antisense strand; (c) extending the primer along the antisense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the antisense strand; (d) hybridizing a second primer to a primer binding site in the sense strand; and (e) extending the second primer along the sense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the sense strand.
Methods and compositions for sequencing double stranded nucleic acids using RCA and MDA
A method for determining sequences from sense and antisense strands of a nucleic acid, including (a) providing a nucleic acid cluster attached to a solid support, wherein the nucleic acid cluster includes a sense strand and an antisense strand of a concatemer, the concatemer including multiple copies of a sequence unit, the sequence unit including a target sequence and a primer binding site; (b) hybridizing a primer to a primer binding site in the antisense strand; (c) extending the primer along the antisense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the antisense strand; (d) hybridizing a second primer to a primer binding site in the sense strand; and (e) extending the second primer along the sense strand to determine the sequence from at least a portion of the target sequence in the sense strand.