Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools
Log in

Navigation

You are here: Home / Platforms / Scientific Publications / DNA template strand sequencing of single-cells maps genomic rearrangements at high resolution.
Home Platforms Scientific Publications DNA template strand sequencing of single-cells maps genomic rearrangements at high resolution.

DNA template strand sequencing of single-cells maps genomic rearrangements at high resolution.

Authors Falconer E, Hills M, Naumann U, Poon SS, Chavez EA, Sanders AD, Zhao Y, Hirst M & Lansdorp PM.
Abstract DNA rearrangements such as sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) are sensitive indicators of genomic stress and instability, but they are typically masked by single-cell sequencing techniques. We developed Strand-seq to independently sequence parental DNA template strands from single cells, making it possible to map SCEs at orders-of-magnitude greater resolution than was previously possible. On average, murine embryonic stem (mES) cells exhibit eight SCEs, which are detected at a resolution of up to 23 bp. Strikingly, Strand-seq of 62 single mES cells predicts that the mm9 mouse reference genome assembly contains at least 17 incorrectly oriented segments totaling nearly 1% of the genome. These misoriented contigs and fragments have persisted through several iterations of the mouse reference genome and have been difficult to detect using conventional sequencing techniques. The ability to map SCE events at high resolution and fine-tune reference genomes by Strand-seq dramatically expands the scope of single-cell sequencing.
Journal Name and Citation

Nat Methods. 2012 Oct 7. doi: 10.1038/nmeth.2206. [Epub ahead of print]

Date of Publication 2012/10/07
Publication Link http://www.nature.com/nmeth/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nmeth.2206.html