Comparison of Single Molecule, Real-Time Sequencing and Nanopore Sequencing for Analysis of the Size, End-Motif, and Tissue-of-Origin of Long Cell-Free DNA in Plasma

Stephanie C Y Yu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Jiaen Deng(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Rong Qiao(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Suk Hang Cheng(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Wenlei Peng(Chinese University of Hong Kong), So Ling Lau(Chinese University of Hong Kong), L Y Lois Choy(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Tak Yeung Leung(Chinese University of Hong Kong), John Wong(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Vincent Wai‐Sun Wong(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Grace Lai‐Hung Wong(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Peiyong Jiang(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Rossa W. K. Chiu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), K.C. Allen Chan(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Yuk Ming Dennis Lo(Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Clinical Chemistry
November 2, 2022
Cited by 75Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent studies using single molecule, real-time (SMRT) sequencing revealed a substantial population of analyzable long cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in plasma. Potential clinical utilities of such long cfDNA in pregnancy and cancer have been demonstrated. However, the performance of different long-read sequencing platforms for the analysis of long cfDNA remains unknown. METHODS: Size biases of SMRT sequencing by Pacific Biosciences (PacBio) and nanopore sequencing by Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) were evaluated using artificial mixtures of sonicated human and mouse DNA of different sizes. cfDNA from plasma samples of pregnant women at different trimesters, hepatitis B carriers, and patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were sequenced with the 2 platforms. RESULTS: Both platforms showed biases to sequence longer (1500 bp vs 200 bp) DNA fragments, with PacBio showing a stronger bias (5-fold overrepresentation of long fragments vs 2-fold in ONT). Percentages of cfDNA fragments 500 bp were around 6-fold higher in PacBio compared with ONT. End motif profiles of cfDNA from PacBio and ONT were similar, yet exhibited platform-dependent patterns. Tissue-of-origin analysis based on single-molecule methylation patterns showed comparable performance on both platforms. CONCLUSIONS: SMRT sequencing generated data with higher percentages of long cfDNA compared with nanopore sequencing. Yet, a higher number of long cfDNA fragments eligible for the tissue-of-origin analysis could be obtained from nanopore sequencing due to its much higher throughput. When analyzing the size and end motif of cfDNA, one should be aware of the analytical characteristics and possible biases of the sequencing platforms being used.


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