METHODS FOR TARGETED GENOMIC ANALYSIS

Abstract
The invention provides a method for genetic analysis in individuals that reveals both the genetic sequences and chromosomal copy number of targeted and specific genomic loci in a single assay. The present invention further provide methods for the sensitive and specific detection of target gene sequences and gene expression profiles.
Description
STATEMENT REGARDING SEQUENCE LISTING

The Sequence Listing associated with this application is provided in text format in lieu of a paper copy, and is hereby incorporated by reference into the specification. The name of the text file containing the Sequence Listing is CLFK_001_03US_ST25.txt. The text file is 188 KB, was created on Jan. 10, 2018, and is being submitted electronically via EFS-Web.


BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
Technical Field

The invention relates generally to a method for genetic analysis in individuals that reveals both the genetic sequences and chromosomal copy number of targeted and specific genomic loci in a single assay. In particular, the present invention relates to methods that provide sensitive and specific detection of target gene sequences or gene transcripts and methods that reveal both variant sequences and overall gene copy number in a single assay.


Description of the Related Art

Both complete human genome sequences of individual human subjects and partial genome resequencing studies have revealed the basic theme that all humans appear to possess less than perfect genomes. In particular, normal healthy human subjects are found to harbor hundreds if not thousands of genetic lesions within their genome sequences. Many of these lesions are known or predicted to eliminate the function of the gene in which they reside. The implication is that while normal diploid humans possess two functional copies of most genes, there are many instances in all humans where only one (or zero) functional gene copies are present. Similarly, instances where genes are overrepresented by gene duplication/amplification events are also encountered with significant frequency.


One of the key features in biological networks is functional redundancy. Normal, healthy individuals can tolerate the average load of genetic lesions because they possess, on average, two copies of every gene such that loss of one copy is inconsequential. Moreover, sets of genes often perform similar functions such that minor perturbations in specific gene functions are generally compensated for within a larger network of functional elements. While functional compensation in biological systems is a general theme, there are many instances in which specific gene loss can trigger acute disruptive events. By way of example, cancers appear to be the consequence of genetic disease in which the compound effect of multiple individual lesions is uncontrolled cell proliferation. Similarly, prescribed medicines are often specific chemical entities that are transported, metabolized and/or eliminated by very specific genes. Perturbations in these genes, while generally inconsequential under normal circumstances, can manifest as adverse events (e.g., side effects) during chemical therapy.


The central aim of “personalized medicine”, increasingly referred to as “precision medicine,” is to merge genetic information that is specific to the patient with treatment options that are compatible with the individual's genetic profile. However, the vast potential of personalized medicine has yet to be realized. To realize this goal, there must be clinically acceptable, robust genetic diagnostic tests that can reliably determine the genetic status of relevant genes.


BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Particular embodiments contemplated herein provide a method for generating a tagged DNA library comprising treating fragmented DNA with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired DNA; and ligating a random nucleic acid tag sequence, and optionally a sample code sequence and/or a PCR primer sequence to the fragmented end-repaired DNA to generate the tagged DNA library.


In particular embodiments, the random nucleic acid tag sequence is from about 2 to about 100 nucleotides. In some embodiments, the present invention provides that the random nucleic acid tag sequence is from about 2 to about 8 nucleotides.


In certain embodiments, the fragmented end-repaired DNA contains blunt ends. In some embodiments, the blunt ends are further modified to contain a single base pair overhang.


In certain embodiments, the ligating comprises ligating a multifunctional adaptor module to the fragmented end-repaired DNA to generate the tagged DNA library, wherein the multifunctional adaptor molecule comprises: i) a first region comprising a random nucleic acid tag sequence; ii) a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and iii) a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.


In additional embodiments, the method further comprises hybridizing a tagged DNA library with at least one multifunctional capture probe module to form a complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library.


In further embodiments, the method further comprises isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex.


In some embodiments, the method further comprises 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing of the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex to remove the single stranded 3′ ends. In some embodiments, the enzyme for use in the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing is T4 polymerase.


In particular embodiments, the method further comprises 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from the 3′ end of the multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template.


In certain embodiments, the method further comprises joining of the multifunctional capture probe and isolated tagged DNA library fragments through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase.


In further embodiments, the method further comprises performing PCR on the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatically processed complex, wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In various particular embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template; d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the complement of the isolated target region is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the complement of the DNA target region, the target-specific region of the multifunctional capture probe and the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In various certain embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing the creation of a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase; d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is joined to the isolated tagged DNA target clone in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module; and e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In particular embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in d); and e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In certain embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template; d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in d); and e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In further embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing the creation of a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase; d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in d); and e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In additional embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); c) performing PCR on the complex from b) to replicate a region that is 3′ relative to the sequence of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged DNA library sequence that is located 3′ relative to the multifunctional capture probe; and d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In particular embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the genomic library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); c) performing 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged DNA library sequence that is located 3′ relative to the multifunctional capture probe; and d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In certain embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); c) performing the creation of a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the complement of the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and a region of the tagged DNA library sequence that is located 5′ relative to the multifunctional capture probe; and d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In particular embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region is provided comprising: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); c) performing PCR on the complex from b) to replicate a region that is 3′ relative to sequence of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged DNA library sequence that is located 3′ relative to the multifunctional capture probe; d) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in c); and e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In various embodiments, the targeted genetic analysis is sequence analysis.


In particular embodiments, the tagged DNA library is amplified by PCR to generate an amplified tagged DNA library.


In certain embodiments, the DNA is from a biological sample selected from the group consisting of blood, skin, hair, hair follicles, saliva, oral mucous, vaginal mucous, sweat, tears, epithelial tissues, urine, semen, seminal fluid, seminal plasma, prostatic fluid, pre-ejaculatory fluid (Cowper's fluid), excreta, biopsy, ascites, cerebrospinal fluid, lymph, and tissue extract sample or biopsy sample.


In further embodiments, a tagged DNA library comprises tagged DNA sequences, wherein each tagged DNA sequence comprises: i) fragmented end-repaired DNA; ii) a random nucleotide tag sequence; iii) a sample code sequence; and iv) a PCR primer sequence.


In additional embodiments, a hybrid tagged DNA library comprises hybrid tagged DNA sequences for use in targeted genetic analysis, wherein each hybrid tagged DNA sequence comprises: i) fragmented end-repaired DNA; ii) a random nucleotide tag sequence; iii) a sample code sequence; iv) a PCR primer sequence; and v) a multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In further embodiments, a multifunctional adaptor module comprises: i) a first region comprising a random nucleotide tag sequence; ii) a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and iii) a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.


In particular embodiments, a multifunctional capture probe module comprises: i) a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide; ii) a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific target region; and iii) a third region comprising a tail sequence. In some embodiments, the first region of the capture probe module is bound to a partner oligonucleotide.


In some embodiments, the partner oligonucleotide is chemically modified.


In one embodiment, compositions comprise a tagged DNA library, a multifunctional adaptor module and a multifunctional capture probe module.


In particular embodiments, a composition comprises a hybrid tagged genomic library according to the methods of the present invention.


In certain embodiments, a composition comprises a reaction mixture for performing the methods contemplated herein.


In particular embodiments, a reaction mixture capable of generating a tagged DNA library comprises: a) fragmented DNA and b) DNA end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired DNA.


In certain embodiments, a reaction mixture further comprises a multifunctional adaptor module.


In additional embodiments, a reaction mixture further comprises a multifunctional capture probe module.


In some embodiments, a reaction mixture further comprises an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity and PCR amplification activity.


In one embodiment, the reaction mixture comprises a FLAP endonuclease, a DNA polymerase, and DNA ligase.


In any of the foregoing embodiments, the DNA can be isolated genomic DNA or cDNA.


In various embodiments, a method for generating a tagged genomic library is provided comprising: treating fragmented genomic DNA with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA; and ligating a random nucleic acid tag sequence, and optionally a sample code sequence and/or a PCR primer sequence to the fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA to generate the tagged genomic library.


In particular embodiments, the random nucleic acid tag sequence is from about 2 to about 100 nucleotides.


In certain embodiments, the random nucleic acid tag sequence is from about 2 to about 8 nucleotides.


In additional embodiments, the fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA contains blunt ends.


In further embodiments, the blunt ends are further modified to contain a single base pair overhang.


In some embodiments, the ligating comprises ligating a multifunctional adaptor module to the fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA to generate the tagged genomic library, wherein the multifunctional adaptor molecule comprises: a first region comprising a random nucleic acid tag sequence; a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.


In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module to form a complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library.


In certain particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex.


In additional particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing of the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex to remove the single stranded 3′ ends.


In further particular embodiments, the enzyme for use in the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing is T4 DNA polymerase.


In some particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise performing PCR on the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatically processed complex from the preceding claims, wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); (c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; (d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and (e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In particular embodiments, steps a) through d) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of e) comprises a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two d) steps.


In further embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In some embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In various embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module complex selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); (c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; (d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; (e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in d); and (f) quantitating the PCR reaction in e), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific genomic target region.


In some embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step e).


In further embodiments, steps a) through e) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment is performed using the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two e) steps.


In additional embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In certain embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In various embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module complex selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); (c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; (d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and (e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in d).


In certain embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step e).


In particular embodiments, steps a) through e) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment is performed using the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two e) steps.


In some embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In additional embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In various embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module comprises selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); (c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; (d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; (e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in d); and (f) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from e).


In particular embodiments, steps a) through e) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of f) comprises performing a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences from the at least two e) steps.


In certain embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In additional embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); (c) performing 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe on the complex from b) to replicate a region of the captured, tagged genomic target region that is 3′ of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged genomic target region that is located in the 3′ direction from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target region; and (d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In further embodiments, steps a) through c) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of d) comprises a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two d) steps.


In some embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In particular embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In various embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); (c) performing 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe on the complex from b) to replicate a region of the captured tagged genomic target region that is 3′ of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged genomic target region that is located in the 3′ direction from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target region; and (d) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in c); and (e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific genomic target region.


In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step d).


In certain embodiments, steps a) through d) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from the at least two d) steps.


In additional embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In further embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In some embodiments, the targeted genetic analysis is sequence analysis.


In particular embodiments, the tagged genomic library is amplified by PCR to generate an amplified tagged genomic library.


In related particular embodiments, the genomic DNA is from a biological sample selected from the group consisting of blood, skin, hair, hair follicles, saliva, oral mucous, vaginal mucous, sweat, tears, epithelial tissues, urine, semen, seminal fluid, seminal plasma, prostatic fluid, pre-ejaculatory fluid (Cowper's fluid), excreta, biopsy, ascites, cerebrospinal fluid, lymph, and tissue extract sample or biopsy sample.


In various embodiments, a tagged genomic library is provided comprising tagged genomic sequences, wherein each tagged genomic sequence comprises: fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA; a random nucleotide tag sequence; a sample code sequence; and a PCR primer sequence.


In various related embodiments, a tagged cDNA library is provided comprising tagged cDNA sequences, wherein each tagged cDNA sequence comprises: fragmented end-repaired cDNA; a random nucleotide tag sequence; a sample code sequence; and a PCR primer sequence.


In various particular embodiments, a hybrid tagged genomic library is provided comprising hybrid tagged genomic sequences for use in targeted genetic analysis, wherein each hybrid tagged genomic sequence comprises: fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA; a random nucleotide tag sequence; a sample code sequence; a PCR primer sequence; a genomic target region; and a multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In various certain embodiments, a hybrid tagged cDNA library is provided comprising hybrid tagged cDNA sequences for use in targeted genetic analysis, wherein each hybrid tagged cDNA sequence comprises: fragmented end-repaired cDNA; a random nucleotide tag sequence; a sample code sequence; a PCR primer sequence; a cDNA target region; and a multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In various certain embodiments, a multifunctional adaptor module is provided comprising: a first region comprising a random nucleotide tag sequence; a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.


In various additional embodiments, a multifunctional capture probe module is provided comprising: a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide; a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific genomic target region; and a third region comprising a tail sequence.


In particular embodiments, the first region is bound to a partner oligonucleotide.


In particular embodiments, a multifunctional adaptor probe hybrid module is provided comprising: a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide and capable of functioning as a PCR primer and a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific genomic target region.


In certain embodiments, the first region is bound to a partner oligonucleotide.


In some embodiments, the partner oligonucleotide is chemically modified.


In further embodiments, a composition comprising a tagged genomic library, a multifunctional adaptor module and a multifunctional capture probe module is provided.


In additional embodiments, a composition comprising a hybrid tagged genomic or c DNA library according to any of the preceding embodiments is provided.


In various embodiments, a reaction mixture for performing a method of any one of the preceding embodiments is provided.


In particular embodiments, a reaction mixture capable of generating a tagged genomic library is provided comprising: fragmented genomic DNA; and DNA end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA.


In particular embodiments, a reaction mixture capable of generating a tagged genomic library is provided comprising: fragmented cDNA; and DNA end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired cDNA.


In particular embodiments, a reaction mixture comprises a multifunctional adaptor module.


In some embodiments, a reaction mixture comprises a multifunctional capture probe module.


In certain embodiments, a reaction mixture comprises an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity and PCR amplification activity.


In various embodiments, a method for DNA sequence analysis is provided comprising: obtaining one or more clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises targeted genomic DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; performing a paired end sequencing reaction on the one or more clones and obtaining one or more sequencing reads; and ordering or clustering the sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In particular embodiments, a method for DNA sequence analysis is provided comprising: obtaining one or more clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises targeted genomic DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; performing a sequencing reaction on the one or more clones in which a single long sequencing read of greater than about 100 nucleotides is obtained, wherein the read is sufficient to identify both the first DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence; and ordering or clustering sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In certain embodiments, the sequences of the one or more clones are compared to one or more human reference DNA sequences.


In additional embodiments, sequences that do not match the one or more human reference DNA sequences are identified.


In further embodiments, non-matching sequences are used to create a de novo assembly from the non-matching sequence data.


In some embodiments, the de novo assemblies are used to identify novel sequence rearrangements associated with the capture probe.


In various embodiments, a method for genomic copy number determination analysis is provided comprising: obtaining one or more clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence and a targeted genomic DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; performing a paired end sequencing reaction on the one or more clones and obtaining one or more sequencing reads; and ordering or clustering the sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In some embodiments, a method for genomic copy number determination analysis is provided comprising: obtaining one or more clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence and a targeted genomic DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; performing a sequencing reaction on the one or more clones in which a single long sequencing read of greater than about 100 nucleotides is obtained, wherein the read is sufficient to identify both the first DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence; and ordering or clustering sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In certain embodiments, the random nucleotide tag sequence is about 2 to about 50 nucleotides in length.


In further embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise analyzing all sequencing reads associated with a second read sequence by: determining the distributions of unique and redundant sequencing reads; counting the number of times a unique read is encountered; fitting a frequency distribution of the unique reads to a statistical distribution; inferring a total number of unique reads; and normalizing the total number of inferred unique read to an assumption that most human genetic loci are generally diploid.


In additional embodiments, an inferred copy number of one or more targeted loci are determined.


In some embodiments, the one or more target loci that deviate from an expected copy number value are determined.


In further embodiments, the one or more targeted loci of a gene are grouped together in a collection of loci and the copy number measurements from the collection of targeted loci are averaged and normalized.


In additional embodiments, the inferred copy number of a gene is represented by the normalized average of all the target loci representing that gene.


In certain embodiments, a method for generating a tagged RNA expression library is provided comprising: fragmenting a cDNA library; treating the fragmented cDNA library with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired cDNA; and ligating a multifunctional adapter molecule to the fragmented end-repaired c DNA to generate a tagged RNA expression library.


In particular embodiments, a method for generating a tagged RNA expression library is provided comprising: preparing a cDNA library from the total RNA of one or more cells; fragmenting the cDNA library; treating the fragmented cDNA with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired cDNA; and ligating a multifunctional adapter molecule to the fragmented end-repaired c DNA to generate a tagged RNA expression library.


In various embodiments, the cDNA library is an oligo-dT primed cDNA library.


In particular embodiments, the cDNA library is primed by random oligonucleotides comprising about 6 to about 20 random nucleotides.


In certain embodiments, the cDNA library is primed by random hexamers or random octamers.


In additional embodiments, the cDNA library is fragmented to a size of about 250 bp to about 750 bp.


In further embodiments, the cDNA library is fragmented to a size of about 500 bp.


In some embodiments, the multifunctional adaptor module comprises: a first region comprising a random nucleic acid tag sequence, and optionally; a second region comprising a sample code sequence, and optionally a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.


In related embodiments, the multifunctional adaptor module comprises a first region comprising a random nucleic acid tag sequence, a second region comprising a sample code sequence, and a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.


In various embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise hybridizing a tagged cDNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module to form a complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes to a specific target region in the cDNA library.


In some embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise isolating the tagged cDNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex.


In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing of the isolated tagged cDNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex to remove the single stranded 3′ ends.


In some embodiments, the enzyme for use in the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing is T4 DNA polymerase.


In certain embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise performing PCR on the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatically processed complex, wherein a tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the cDNA target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In further embodiments, a method for targeted gene expression analysis is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged RNA expression library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the tagged RNA expression library; (b) isolating the tagged RNA expression library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); (c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged RNA expression library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; (d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and (e) performing targeted gene expression analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In additional embodiments, a method for targeted gene expression analysis is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged RNA expression library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the RNA expression library; (b) isolating the tagged RNA expression library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); (c) performing 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe on the complex from b) to replicate a region of the captured, tagged target region that is 3′ of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of the tagged target region that is located in the 3′ direction from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the target region; and (d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In various embodiments, a method for targeted gene expression analysis is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged cDNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the cDNA library; (b) isolating the tagged cDNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); (c) performing 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe on the complex from b) to replicate a region of the captured, tagged target region in the cDNA library that is 3′ of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of the tagged target region in the cDNA library that is located in the 3′ direction from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the target region; and (d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In particular embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two (a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In certain embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the target region.


In additional embodiments, a method for cDNA sequence analysis is provided comprising: (a) obtaining one or more clones, each clone comprising a first cDNA sequence and a second cDNA sequence, wherein the first cDNA sequence comprises targeted genomic cDNA sequence and the second cDNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; (b) performing a paired end sequencing reaction on the one or more clones and obtaining one or more sequencing reads; and (c) ordering or clustering the sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In various embodiments, a method for cDNA sequence analysis is provided comprising: (a) obtaining one or more clones, each clone comprising a first cDNA sequence and a second cDNA sequence, wherein the first cDNA sequence comprises targeted genomic DNA sequence and the second cDNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; (b) performing a sequencing reaction on the one or more clones in which a single long sequencing read of greater than about 100 nucleotides is obtained, wherein the read is sufficient to identify both the first cDNA sequence and the second cDNA sequence; and (c) ordering or clustering sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise analyzing all sequencing reads associated with a second read sequence by: determining the distributions of unique and redundant sequencing reads; counting the number of times a unique read is encountered; fitting a frequency distribution of the unique reads to a statistical distribution; inferring a total number of unique reads; and converting unique read counts into transcript abundance using normalization to the total reads collected within each cDNA library sample.


In certain embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; (b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); (c) performing a concerted enzymatic processing of the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from b) that includes 5′ FLAP endonuclease activity, 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension, and nick closure by a DNA ligase to join the complement of the multifunctional capture probe to the target region that is 5′ of the multifunctional capture probe binding site in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the complement of the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and a region of the tagged target region that is located 5′ of the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target region; and (d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).


In various embodiments, steps a) through c) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of d) comprises a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two d) steps.


In certain embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In particular embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the target region.


In additional embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region is provided comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the genomic library; (b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); (c) performing a concerted enzymatic processing of the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from b) that includes 5′ FLAP endonuclease activity, 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension, and nick closure by a DNA ligase to join the complement of the multifunctional capture probe to the target region that is 5′ of the multifunctional capture probe binding site in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the complement of the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and a region of the tagged target region that is located 5′ of the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the target region; and (d) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in c); and (e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In various embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step d).


In particular embodiments, steps a) through d) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from the at least two d) steps.


In particular embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.


In certain embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.


In additional embodiments, the targeted genetic analysis is sequence analysis.


In further embodiments, the target region is a genomic target region and the DNA library is a genomic DNA library.


In some embodiments, the target region is a cDNA target region and the DNA library is a cDNA library.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1: Construction of an amplifiable, sample coded, tagged genomic DNA library. Purified genomic DNA was isolated from a source such as whole blood or a buccal cheek swab. The DNA was fragmented (e.g. by mechanical, enzymatic or chemical means) and the ends of the DNA were repaired, in this example, to blunt ends. The repaired DNA was ligated to a multifunctional adaptor module that contained a universal amplification sequence, a random nucleotide tag sequence and a sample code sequence. A specific example of a typical adaptor duplex molecule is shown by way of example.



FIG. 2A-FIG. 2B: Genomic capture probe design. (FIG. 2A) Structure of a prototypical 114 nt probe. Region 1 is a 34 nt sequence that shares perfect complementarity to a highly modified, 34 nt partner oligonucleotide. The partner oligonucleotide was modified on its 5′ end with a biotin—TEG chemical entity that enabled capture on streptavidin-coated magnetic beads. B stands for the “Bio-TEG” modification. Region 2 is the 60 nt probe region designed to interact with genomic DNA targets. Region 3 is a 20 nt tail that introduced PCR amplification sequences into the captured genomic fragments. (FIG. 2B) An example of the highly modified partner strand that is complementary to region 1 of each individual probe.



FIG. 3A-FIG. 3B: Sequence “spreading” in conventional, hybridization-based capture experiments. (FIG. 3A) Flanking fragments can “hitch-hike” into capture libraries by way of legitimate hybridization triplexes involving probe-fragment-flanking fragment interactions. (FIG. 3B) The net result of cross-fragment hybridization is sequence “spreading”, meaning sequences that are within proximity to the target region (dashed lines) but fall outside the boundaries of the desired target.



FIG. 4A-FIG. 4D: Enzymatic processing of fragment: probe hybridized complexes. (FIG. 4A) The purified complex of fragment (light gray) and probe (black) prior to processing. B—biotin affinity modification. (FIG. 4B) DNA polymerase (e.g. T4 DNA polymerase) encoded 3′→5′ exonuclease activity removes the 3′ segment of the captured fragment. (FIG. 4C) Upon encountering the probe: fragment duplex region, the polymerase copies the probe tail segment onto the hybridized genomic fragment. (FIG. 4D) The final modified fragment in which the tail segment of the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module has been copied onto the target genomic fragment.



FIG. 5A-FIG. 5B: Enzymatic processing of capture complexes “focuses” sequencing reads on the target region. (FIG. 5A) Enzymatically processed fragment shown in relation to the capture probe. The orientation of the sequencing read is specified by the probe and is denoted by the thin black arrow. (FIG. 5B) Hypothetical trace of focused reads where “spreading” is minimized.



FIG. 6A-FIG. 6B: The “focusing effect” of directional probes. (FIG. 6A) Typical exons average 100-150 bp. Directional capture probes are positioned in intronic region flanking the target segment. (FIG. 6B) The sequence read distribution for each individual probe is shown by the dashed line. The additive coverage is shown by the solid line. The directional nature of coverage can be used, as shown in this example, to obtain sharp focus on query regions.



FIG. 7: Demonstration of adaptor-dimer-free fragment libraries with “tunable, on/off” amplification properties. The exact same gel image is shown in four different color and contrast schemes. The samples were: (1) no insert, adaptor-only ligation amplified with ACA2 20; (2) no insert, adaptor-only ligation amplified with ACA2 (normal 25 nt PCR primer); (3) no insert, adaptor-only ligation amplified with ACA2 FLFP (full length forward primer); (4) 20 ng of ˜200 bp hgDNA insert+adaptor ligation amplified with ACA2 20; (5) 20 ng of ˜200 bp hgDNA insert+adaptor ligation amplified with ACA2 (normal 25 nt PCR primer); and (6) 20 ng of ˜200 bp hgDNA insert+adaptor ligation amplified with ACA2 FLFP (full length forward primer). No amplified material was visible in the adaptor alone ligation→PCR products (lanes 1-3). The shorter, 20 nt ACA2 primer showed inefficient amplification (lane 4) relative to the “normal”, 25 nt ACA2 primer (lane 5). Only the faintest trace of material was visible with the 58 nt ACA2 FLFP primer (lane 6).



FIG. 8: Even distribution of average fragment size following Covaris fragmentation of gDNA. Male (M) and female (F) human gDNA (received from Promega Corporation, Madison, Wis., USA) was sheared via Covaris conditions, and 2 μL (˜120 ng) or 5 μL (˜300 ng) of the pre-fragmented (U) or the post-fragmented (C) samples were loaded on a 2% agarose gel. The average fragment size was an even distribution centered around 200 bp.



FIG. 9: Amplification traces for proteolipid protein 1 (PLP1) qPCR assay 6 demonstrating expected copy number differences between male and female samples. Triplicate male or female genomic DNA templates were amplified by real-time PCR on the Illumina Eco instrument using PLP1 qPCR assay 6. Amplification traces clearly demonstrated copy number differences between the female and male samples.



FIG. 10: Demonstration of expected amplicon size and uniqueness following conventional PCR with PLP1 qPCR assay primers. Male or female genomic DNA templates were amplified by conventional PCR using qPCR assay primer sets 1-8 (Example 3) and the unpurified PCR reactions were loaded directly on 2% agarose gels. The upper bands of each doublet were consistent with the projected mobility of the assay PCR products. The lower “fuzzy” material was most likely unused PCR primers.



FIG. 11A-FIG. 11B: Analysis of PLP1 qPCR assay performance using ABI 2×SYBR mix and conditions. DNA fragments from genomic library I (constructed in Example 4) were used as template to measure the performance of the PLP1 qPCR assays when set up at room temperature using ABI 2×SYBR master mix in a 2 step PCR reaction. No template control traces (FIG. 11A) and +gDNA traces (FIG. 11B) are shown to provide a qualitative picture of assay performance.



FIG. 12: Reduced insert size following post-capture processing with T4-DNA polymerase. Four samples of adapter ligated gDNA fragments from genomic library I (constructed in Example 4) were captured as described (Example 6—PLP1 EXON 2). Two of these samples utilized universal binding oligo C1, while the other two samples were bound with oligo C10. Samples were then either treated with T4-DNA polymerase (T4 processed) or processed similarly in a reaction solution lacking the T4 polymerase (untreated). Post-capture processing with T4-polymerase induced an overall reduction in the size distribution of the sample, suggesting a reduction in the average size of insert. Additionally, T4 processing resulted in the appearance of two faint bands (˜250 bp and ˜175 bp).



FIG. 13A-FIG. 13C: Direct measurement of post-capture processing sensitivity. First, PLP1 exon 2 specific genomic DNA fragments were isolated by pull down/pull out from the female gDNA library (Example 1) using single PLP1 capture probes in independent reactions. Captured material was quantified using an adjacent PLP1 qPCR assay primer pair, as illustrated in (FIG. 13A). Following enzymatic processing the amount of processed complex was measured again by qPCR using one PLP1 specific primer and one probe-specific primer, as show in (FIG. 13B). The ratio of the measurements in [B/A×100%] will yield an estimate of processing efficiency. The PCR products from real-time reactions were extracted and subjected to gel analysis to verify that amplicons of the expected length were produced (FIG. 13C). This was possible since both PCR reactions had discrete start and stop points. Processing efficiency was inferred from pull-outs that yielded interpretable data from A+B+C.



FIG. 14: Gel analysis of qPCR products from real-time quantification of pre- and post-processed PLP1 exon 2 captured DNA fragments. Six independent capture reactions (two with probe #1, two with probe #4, one with probe #2, and one with probe #3) were processed as described in FIG. 16. The probes were from the B10 universal oligo set (Example 4) and comprised universal oligo and probe ultramer. Under these conditions, assay sets 3 (probe 4), 5 (probe 2) and 6 (probe 3) yielded PCR products consistent with the assay amplicon (top gel) or the post-processed PLP1 to adaptor amplicons (bottom gel), while no detectable products were observed in the other assay sets.



FIG. 15: Alternative enzymatic processing of fragment: probe hybridized complexes. In contrast to the method outlined in FIG. 4, this alternative approach shifted from having the clone copy the probe to having the probe copy the clone. This reversal in polarity means that the 5′ end of the probe was used as both the pull-down sequence and the reverse PCR sequence. The 3′ end of the probe was left unmodified thus it was able to copy the clone using DNA polymerase; 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extended the multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template.



FIG. 16: Experimental design employed to test the alternative enzymatic processing concept. Four well behaved qPCR assays, (10, 14, 15 and 16) were matched with probes that “pointed” at those assays. Importantly, although the target sequences of the probe and qPCR assays were directed to regions within proximity to one another, they did not overlap. Thus the effect of the processing could be directly tested using these well-established assay sets.



FIG. 17: Decrease in the average insert size of the library induced by the alternative processing method. DNA fragments were hybridized to capture probes/ultramers, and captured on streptavidin beads as previously described (FIG. 12). Post-capture processing was performed using the alternative method described in FIG. 17, and input samples as well as pre- and post-processed samples were analyzed by 2% agarose gel electrophoresis. As was expected, the average insert size of the library was decreased in the processed samples, thus supporting the conclusion that the processing worked. Collapsing of the library into an apparent band at the bottom of the processed sample was also observed, indicating some priming off of probe may have occurred



FIG. 18A-FIG. 18D: Enhanced focusing of target sequences by the alternative processing method. The sequence reads obtained in Example 13 were displayed in the UCSC Genome Browser to assess the coverage and distribution of captured fragments within specific target sites. The density of sequence reads corresponding to ‘capture only’ and ‘processed’ libraries are shown (black) for two target regions on the X chromosome, one corresponding to exons of the PLP1 gene (FIG. 18A and FIG. 18B) and the other an intronic segment of the ZNF630 gene (FIG. 18C and FIG. 18D). Reads from libraries generated by the alternative processing method (FIG. 18B and FIG. 18D) are more highly concentrated in target sites than libraries constructed by capture alone (FIG. 18A and FIG. 18C). Capture probe binding sites are shown in red. Each track is scaled to the maximal read density values (y-axis) observed for a given stretch of genomic coordinates (x-axis).



FIG. 19A-FIG. 19B: Diagram of vertical alignment. All next generation sequence (NGS) analysis starts with alignment to a reference genome. (FIG. 19A) Initial read alignment is based on configurable word string searches that can accommodate single nucleotide variants (SNVs) and, to a limited extent, insertions/deletions. (FIG. 19B) The collective set of aligned reads is analyzed for SNVs. In the example shown, the candidate SNV was observed twice, but the read coordinates for these two reads was identical. The vertical alignment paradigm generates a large number of SNVs and/or insertions/deletion hypotheses that require orthogonal validation.



FIG. 20: Diagram of data analysis scheme. Step one is to match reads to probes. Step two will be to analyze the sequence information connected “horizontally” to each probe.



FIG. 21: Diagram of horizontal alignment “forces” reads associated with probe 1 and probe 2. Assembly will generate two contigs, one with a wild-type exon structure and one with an insertion structure. Two important principles emerge: 1) Overlapping reads from adjacent probes will support or refute the hypothesis of an indel-containing allele of the captured exon and 2) micro-CNV alleles outside of capture probes are readily detectable by horizontal methodologies.



FIG. 22: Diagram of “low confidence” SNV calls. Candidate nucleotide variants can be actual events harbored in the individual from whom the sample was collected and processed, but they can also be artifacts introduced during processing and sequencing of samples. The methods described here were designed to differentiate between actual, “high confidence” variant calls and artifactual “low confidence” variant calls. Sequencing reads covering a target region are collected from multiple different clones in both possible sequencing orientations, and each read is annotated with tag information. The tags allow reads derived from the same cloning event to be identified and grouped. SNVs and indels that arise within only one set of clones that are all derived from the same cloning event are low confidence calls that are discarded from further analysis.



FIG. 23A-FIG. 23C: Diagram of “high confidence” SNV calls. Candidate nucleotide variants can be actual events harbored in the individual from whom the sample was collected and processed, but they can also be artifacts introduced during processing and sequencing of samples. The methods described here were designed to differentiate between actual, “high confidence” variant calls and artifactual “low confidence” variant calls. Sequencing reads covering a target region are collected from multiple different clones in both possible sequencing orientations, and each read is annotated with tag information. The tags allow reads derived from distinct cloning events to be identified. Examples shown are (FIG. 23A) reads with the same start point but different sequence labels, (FIG. 23B) reads in the same orientation that have different start points and different labels and (FIG. 23C) reads in opposite orientations. In all these instances, the occurrence and detect of a variant in independent cloning events marks that variant with high confidence, and such variants are followed up with further, orthogonal validation methods.



FIG. 24: Molecularly annotated sequencing read. (A) Forward flow cell (Illumina chemistry) graft sequences and sequencing primer binding site. (B) Reverse flow cell graft sequence and reverse sequencing primer annealing site. (1) Sequence label. (2) Sample label. (3) Forward read start site. (4) Sequence of genomic fragment. (5) Genomic index (probe sequence). The combination of (1)+(3) constitutes the unique read tag that is critical for both variant calling and copy number determination.



FIG. 25: The most significant classes of DNA sequence variants (insertions, deletions, runs of point mutations and/or translocations) are also the most difficult to detect by alignment based methods.



FIG. 26A-FIG. 26B: Dual probe interrogation of target regions (e. g. exons). (FIG. 26A) Typical exons average 100-150 bp. Capture probes are positioned in the intronic region flanking the target segment. These probes have opposite sequence polarity (one queries the “+” stand, the other the “−” strand. (FIG. 26B) The sequence read distribution for each individual probe is indicated by the shaded areas and the read orientations are specified by arrows. Key aspects are that target regions are sequenced by multiple reads in both orientations. Moreover, each probe captures reads that sequence the adjacent probe binding sites. This arrangement is one element that increases the confidence of variant calls.



FIG. 27A-FIG. 27B: The role of sequence tags in variant calling. Sequence “tags” are comprised of a nucleotide code (ovals; in the case of Clearfork a collection of 16 possible three nucleotide sequences) and a ragged, arbitrary clone fragment end sequence. (FIG. 27A) A false-positive variant call is one in which a variant is identified among a collection of sibling sequences that all bear identical sequence tags. (FIG. 27B) A high confidence variant call is found among a collection of sequences that have different sequence tags.



FIG. 28: Copy determination using read observation statistics.



FIG. 29: Molecularly annotated sequencing read. (A) Forward flow cell (Illumina SBS chemistry) graft sequences and sequencing primer binding site. (B) Reverse flow cell graft sequence and reverse sequencing primer annealing site. (1) Sequence label. (2) Sample label. (3) Forward read start site. (4) Sequence of genomic fragment. (5) Genomic index (probe sequence). (6) Capture label. The combination of (1)+(3) constitutes the unique read tag that is critical for copy number determination. The combination of (5)+(6) constitutes a genomic index tag that can be used to monitor and quantify capture events. The forward sequencing read 1 that determines the sequences of annotation elements 1, 2, 3, and 4, and paired-end reverse read 2 that determines the sequences of annotation elements 5 and 6 are indicated.



FIG. 30: Probes (e.g., multifunctional capture probes) are generally directional, meaning they capture sequences on one side (generally the 3′3′ side) of their position. Tail sequences that add additional functionality (e.g., PCR primer binding site, binding site for partner oligo that enables biotin pull-out, etc.) are added in addition to the core targeting 60-mer. Sixty nucleotide targeting sequences are chosen with the following constraints and criterion: (1) The probe is positioned from −100 to +50 nt relative to the start of the target sequence. In the illustration at right, the “start” of the target sequence is the intron:exon junction; (2) Probes are designed with redundancy, as illustrated, such that the resulting sequences from a pair of probes are overlapping in opposite orientations; (3) Probes are selected (where possible) to possess GC content not less than 33% (>20 G's or C's per 60 mer) and not more than 67% (<40 G's or C's per 60 mer); (4) Probes are selected to avoid repeats wherever possible. This is done with the help of REPEATMASKER and/or unique alignability criterion, both of which can be viewed on the UCSC genome browser; (5) In cases the position requirement, GC requirement, and the uniqueness requirement cannot be met, selection rules are relaxed in the following order (GC>position>uniqueness). In other words, GC and positioning are flexible; the uniqueness criterion is not.



FIG. 31A-FIG. 31B: Processing to create targeted genomic sequencing libraries. (FIG. 31A) the initial capture complex comprises a “standard” tagged genomic library fragment, a tailed capture probe that targets a genomic “target region” that is 5′ to the probe, and a biotinylated partner Oligonucleotide that is common to all probes. (FIG. 31B) Processing of the complex into a sequence-ready clone comprises 3 steps: (1) the 5′ FLAP endonuclease of DNA polymerase holoenzyme (e.g., full length Bst polymerase) clips the 5′ tail of the genomic clone; (2) the polymerase extends the partner oligo sequence by polymerization (can occur concurrently with step 1); and (3) Taq ligase repairs the nick between the partner oligo and the genomic fragment. These concerted steps create a sequence-ready clone.



FIG. 32 shows post-capture/processing of PCR products. Lane 1 is ACA2 single primer amplified, unprocessed capture complex. Lanes 2-4 were amplified with AF+CR dual PCR primers.



FIG. 33 shows Steps 1 and 2 of a library free method for generating tagged genomic DNAs and related capture, processing, and analysis methods.



FIG. 34 shows Step 3 of a library free method for generating tagged genomic DNAs and related capture, processing, and analysis methods



FIG. 35 shows Steps 4 and 5 a library free method for generating tagged genomic DNAs and related capture, processing, and analysis methods.



FIG. 36 shows a suppressive PCR strategy for avoiding primer-dimer artifacts in library free methods for generating tagged genomic DNAs.



FIG. 37 shows gel electrophoresis results of raw and sonicated gDNAs used in library free methods for generating tagged genomic DNAs.



FIG. 38 shows a qPCR amplification plot of four gDNA samples prepared by the library free method.



FIG. 39 shows the gel electrophoresis results from raw PCR products amplified from samples prepared by the library free methods.



FIG. 40 shows the gel electrophoresis results from bead-cleaned PCR products amplified from samples prepared by the library free methods.



FIG. 41 shows a qPCR amplification plot of samples prepared by the library free methods using different combinations of enzymes: T4 DNA polymerase (P), T4 DNA ligase (L), and T4 gene 32 protein (32), or no enzyme control.



FIG. 42 shows the gel electrophoresis results of PCR amplified (10 cycles or 16 cycles) samples prepared by the library free methods using different combinations of enzymes: T4 DNA polymerase (P), T4 DNA ligase (L), and T4 gene 32 protein (32), or no enzyme control.



FIG. 43 shows the gel electrophoresis results of individual samples prepared by the library free methods prior to pooling.



FIG. 44 shows CNV for PLP1 in relation to the normalizing autosomal loci KRAS and MYC across samples with variable dosages of the X chromosome. Samples were prepared using library free methods.



FIG. 45 shows the DNA sequence start points for chrX region 15 in the XXXX (4× dosage) sample relative to the capture probe sequence. Reads go from left to right and samples were prepared using library free methods.



FIG. 46 shows the gel electrophoresis results of cDNA prepared from RNA samples using the RNA-seq methods contemplated herein, captured cDNAs, and cDNA preps sized with the Pippin automated DNA size selector.



FIG. 47 shows the correlations of the gene expression of various transcripts in heart versus liver in libraries prepared using a total RNA versus targeted expression strategy for the library preparation.



FIG. 48 shows the correlation of absolute expression levels of various transcript measured in total RNA-seq compared to targeted RNA-seq.



FIG. 49 shows the Cq values of STDs and samples (the average of duplicate measurements described in Example 10 except (i) the experiment repeated on plate 2 and (ii) M1, M2 and M3 were measured in three sets of duplicates—average of the three measurements taken).



FIG. 50 shows the genomes per μl for each library that was made in Example 10.



FIG. 51 shows the conversion of designated samples in Example 10 into 10 copy, 20 copy, 40 copy, 80 copy, etc. libraries for downstream capture tests.



FIG. 52 shows the qPCR measurement of capture sensitivity and specificity described in Example 12.



FIG. 53 shows a summary of alignment statistics for each library pool described in Example 13.



FIG. 54 shows the design of an experiment for evaluating the enzymatic requirements for complex processing described in Example 20.



FIG. 55 shows the list of candidate transcripts and their reported RPKM values described in Example 21.



FIG. 56 shows the final read count of the data set described in Example 21.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION
A. Overview

The present invention is based at least in part, on the discovery that the coordinated utilization of several key molecular modules can be employed in performing targeted genetic analyses.


The practice of the invention will employ, unless indicated specifically to the contrary, conventional methods of chemistry, biochemistry, organic chemistry, molecular biology, microbiology, recombinant DNA techniques, genetics, immunology, and cell biology that are within the skill of the art, many of which are described below for the purpose of illustration. Such techniques are explained fully in the literature. See, e.g., Sambrook, et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual (3rd Edition, 2001); Sambrook, et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual (2nd Edition, 1989); Maniatis et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual (1982); Ausubel et al., Current Protocols in Molecular Biology (John Wiley and Sons, updated July 2008); Short Protocols in Molecular Biology: A Compendium of Methods from Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Greene Pub. Associates and Wiley-Interscience; Glover, DNA Cloning: A Practical Approach, vol. I & II (IRL Press, Oxford, 1985); Anand, Techniques for the Analysis of Complex Genomes, (Academic Press, New York, 1992); Transcription and Translation (B. Hames & S. Higgins, Eds., 1984); Perbal, A Practical Guide to Molecular Cloning (1984); and Harlow and Lane, Antibodies, (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1998).


All publications, patents and patent applications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.


B. Definitions

Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by those of ordinary skill in the art to which the invention belongs. Although any methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of the present invention, preferred embodiments of compositions, methods and materials are described herein. For the purposes of the present invention, the following terms are defined below.


The articles “a,” “an,” and “the” are used herein to refer to one or to more than one (i.e. to at least one) of the grammatical object of the article. By way of example, “an element” means one element or more than one element.


The use of the alternative (e.g., “or”) should be understood to mean either one, both, or any combination thereof of the alternatives.


The term “and/or” should be understood to mean either one, or both of the alternatives.


As used herein, the term “about” or “approximately” refers to a quantity, level, value, number, frequency, percentage, dimension, size, amount, weight or length that varies by as much as 15%, 10%, 9%, 8%, 7%, 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2% or 1% to a reference quantity, level, value, number, frequency, percentage, dimension, size, amount, weight or length. In one embodiment, the term “about” or “approximately” refers a range of quantity, level, value, number, frequency, percentage, dimension, size, amount, weight or length±15%, +10%, +9%, +8%, +7%, +6%, +5%, +4%, +3%, +2%, or +1% about a reference quantity, level, value, number, frequency, percentage, dimension, size, amount, weight or length.


Throughout this specification, unless the context requires otherwise, the words “comprise”, “comprises” and “comprising” will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated step or element or group of steps or elements but not the exclusion of any other step or element or group of steps or elements. In particular embodiments, the terms “include,” “has,” “contains,” and “comprise” are used synonymously.


By “consisting of” is meant including, and limited to, whatever follows the phrase “consisting of.” Thus, the phrase “consisting of” indicates that the listed elements are required or mandatory, and that no other elements may be present.


By “consisting essentially of” is meant including any elements listed after the phrase, and limited to other elements that do not interfere with or contribute to the activity or action specified in the disclosure for the listed elements. Thus, the phrase “consisting essentially of” indicates that the listed elements are required or mandatory, but that no other elements are optional and may or may not be present depending upon whether or not they affect the activity or action of the listed elements.


Reference throughout this specification to “one embodiment,” “an embodiment,” “a particular embodiment,” “a related embodiment,” “a certain embodiment,” “an additional embodiment,” or “a further embodiment” or combinations thereof means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the present invention. Thus, the appearances of the foregoing phrases in various places throughout this specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment. Furthermore, the particular features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments.


As used herein, the term “isolated” means material that is substantially or essentially free from components that normally accompany it in its native state. In particular embodiments, the term “obtained” or “derived” is used synonymously with isolated.


As used herein, the term “DNA” refers to deoxyribonucleic acid. In various embodiments, the term DNA refers to genomic DNA, recombinant DNA, synthetic DNA, or cDNA. In one embodiment, DNA refers to genomic DNA or cDNA. In particular embodiments, the DNA comprises a “target region.” DNA libraries contemplated herein include genomic DNA libraries and cDNA libraries constructed from RNA, e.g., an RNA expression library. In various embodiments, the DNA libraries comprise one or more additional DNA sequences and/or tags.


A “target region” refers to a region of interest within a DNA sequence. In various embodiments, targeted genetic analyses are performed on the target region. In particular embodiments, the target region is sequenced or the copy number of the target region is determined.


C. Exemplary Embodiments

The present invention contemplates, in part, a method for generating a tagged genomic library. In particular embodiments, the method comprises treating fragmented DNA, e.g., genomic DNA or cDNA, with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired DNA followed by ligating a random nucleic acid tag sequence to generate the tagged genomic library. In some embodiments, a sample code sequence and/or a PCR primer sequence are optionally ligated to the fragmented end-repaired DNA.


The present invention contemplates, in part, a method for generating a tagged DNA library. In particular embodiments, the method comprises treating fragmented DNA with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired DNA followed by ligating a random nucleic acid tag sequence to generate the tagged DNA library. In some embodiments, a sample code sequence and/or a PCR primer sequence are optionally ligated to the fragmented end-repaired DNA.


Illustrative methods for fragmenting DNA include, but are not limited to: shearing, sonication, enzymatic digestion; including restriction digests, as well as other methods. In particular embodiments, any method known in the art for fragmenting DNA can be employed with the present invention.


In some embodiments, the fragmented DNA is processed by end-repair enzymes to generate end-repaired DNA. In some embodiments, the end-repair enzymes can yield for example blunt ends, 5′-overhangs, and 3′-overhangs. In some embodiments, the end-repaired DNA contains blunt ends. In some embodiments, the end-repaired DNA is processed to contain blunt ends. In some embodiments, the blunt ends of the end-repaired DNA are further modified to contain a single base pair overhang. In some embodiments, end-repaired DNA containing blunt ends can be further processed to contain adenine (A)/thymine (T) overhang. In some embodiments, end-repaired DNA containing blunt ends can be further processed to contain adenine (A)/thymine (T) overhang as the single base pair overhang. In some embodiments, the end-repaired DNA has non-templated 3′ overhangs. In some embodiments, the end-repaired DNA is processed to contain 3′-overhangs. In some embodiments, the end-repaired DNA is processed with terminal transferase (TdT) to contain 3′-overhangs. In some embodiments, a G-tail can be added by TdT. In some embodiments, the end-repaired DNA is processed to contain overhang ends using partial digestion with any known restriction enzymes (e.g., with the enzyme Sau3A, and the like.


In particular embodiments, DNA fragments are tagged using one or more “random nucleotide tags” or “random nucleic acid tags.” As used herein, the terms “random nucleotide tag” or “random nucleic acid tag” refer to a polynucleotide of discrete length wherein the nucleotide sequence has been randomly generated or selected. In particular illustrative embodiments, the length of the random nucleic acid tag is from about 2 to about 100 nucleotides, from about 2 to about 75 nucleotides, about 2 to about 50 nucleotides, about 2 to about 25 nucleotides, about 2 to about 20 nucleotides, about 2 to about 15 nucleotides, about 2 to about 10 nucleotides, about 2 to about 8 nucleotides, or about 2 to about 6 nucleotides. In certain embodiments, the length of the random nucleotide tag is from about 2 to about 6 nucleotides (see, e.g., FIG. 1). In one embodiment, the random nucleotide tag sequence is about 2, about 3, about 4, about 5, about 6, about 7, about 8, about 9, or about 10 nucleotides.


In particular embodiments, methods known in the art can be employed to add the random nucleotide tags of the present invention to the fragmented DNA. In some embodiments, “tagmentation” can be employed. Tagmentation is a Nextera Technology that is commercially available (from Illumina and Epicenter, USA) and which can be used to load transposon protein complexes with the random nucleotide tags and/or the multifunctional adaptor modules of the invention. The loaded transposon complexes can then be used in creation of the tagged genomic library according to described methods.


DNA for use in the present methods can come from any source known to those of skill in the art. DNA can be collected from any source, synthesized from RNA as copy DNA (cDNA), and processed into pure or substantially pure DNA for use in the present methods. In some embodiments, the size of the fragmented DNA is in the range of about 2 to about 500 base pairs, about 2 to about 400 base pairs, about 2 to about 300 base pairs, about 2 to about 250 base pairs, about 2 to about 200 base pairs, about 2 to about 100 base pairs or about 2 to about 50 base pairs.


The combination of the introduced “random nucleic acid tag” or “random nucleic acid tags” with the DNA fragment end sequence constitutes a combination of two elements that will hereafter be referred to as “the genomic tag” or the “the cDNA tag.” In some embodiments the uniqueness of “the genomic tag” or the “the cDNA tag” can be determined by the combinatorial product of the diversity within the attached random nucleotide tag pool multiplied by the diversity of the DNA fragment end sequence pool.


The present invention also contemplates, in part, a multifunctional adaptor module. As used herein, the term “multifunctional adaptor module” refers to a polynucleotide comprising: (i) a first region comprising a random nucleotide tag sequence; optionally (ii) a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and optionally (iii) a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence. In particular embodiments, a multifunctional adaptor module comprises a PCR primer sequence, a random nucleotide tag, and a sample code sequence. In certain embodiments, a multifunctional adaptor module comprises a PCR primer sequence and a random nucleotide tag or a sample code sequence. In some embodiments, the second region comprising the sample code is optional. In some embodiments, the multifunctional adaptor module does not include a second region, but instead only a first and third region. The multifunctional adaptor module of the present invention can include blunt or complementary ends appropriate for the ligation method employed, including those disclosed elsewhere herein, as well as any others known to those of skill in the art for ligating the multifunctional adaptor module to the fragmented DNA.


In various embodiments, a first region comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence. In particular embodiments, the first region comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence that is from about 2 to about 100 nucleotides, from about 2 to about 75 nucleotides, about 2 to about 50 nucleotides, about 2 to about 25 nucleotides, about 2 to about 20 nucleotides, about 2 to about 15 nucleotides, about 2 to about 10 nucleotides, about 2 to about 8 nucleotides, or about 2 to about 6 nucleotides, or any intervening number of nucleotides.


In particular embodiments, a second region, when optionally present, comprises a sample code sequence. As used herein, the term “sample code sequence” refers to a polynucleotide that is used to identify the sample. In particular embodiments, the second region comprises a sample code sequence that is from about 1 to about 100 nucleotides, from about 2 to about 75 nucleotides, about 2 to about 50 nucleotides, about 2 to about 25 nucleotides, about 2 to about 20 nucleotides, about 2 to about 15 nucleotides, about 2 to about 10 nucleotides, about 2 to about 8 nucleotides, or about 2 to about 6 nucleotides, or any intervening number of nucleotides.


In certain embodiments, a third region, when optionally present, comprises a PCR primer sequence. In particular embodiments, the third region comprises a PCR primer sequence that is from about 5 to about 200 nucleotides, from about 5 to about 150 nucleotides, from about 10 to about 100 nucleotides from about 10 to about 75 nucleotides, about 10 to about 50 nucleotides, about 10 to about 40 nucleotides, about 20 to about 40 nucleotides, or about 20 to about 30 nucleotides, or any intervening number of nucleotides.


In particular embodiments, a ligation step comprises ligating a multifunctional adaptor module to the fragmented end-repaired DNA. This ligation reaction can be used to generate the tagged DNA library, which comprises end-repaired DNA ligated to a multifunctional adaptor molecule and/or random nucleotide tag. In some embodiments, a single multifunctional adaptor module is employed. In some embodiments, more than one multifunctional adaptor module is employed. In some embodiments, a single multifunctional adaptor module of identical sequence is ligated to each end of the fragmented end-repaired DNA.


The present invention also provides a multifunctional capture probe module. As used herein, the term “multifunctional capture probe module” refers to a polynucleotide comprising: (i) a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide; (ii) a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific target region; and optionally (iii) a third region comprising a tail sequence.


In one embodiment, a multifunctional capture probe module comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide, a region capable of hybridizing to a DNA target sequence, and a tail sequence.


In one embodiment, a multifunctional capture probe module comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide and a region capable of hybridizing to a genomic target sequence.


In particular embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe module optionally comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence.


In various embodiments, a first region comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide. As used herein, the term “partner oligonucleotide” refers to an oligonucleotide that is complementary to a nucleotide sequence of the multifunctional capture probe module. In particular embodiments, the first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide is a sequence that is from about 20 to about 200 nucleotides, from about 20 to about 150 nucleotides, about 30 to about 100 nucleotides, about 30 to about 75 nucleotides, about 20 to about 50 nucleotides, about 30 to about 45 nucleotides, or about 35 to about 45 nucleotides. In certain embodiments, the region is about 30 to about 50 nucleotides, about 30 to about 40 nucleotides, about 30 to about 35 nucleotides or about 34 nucleotides, or any intervening number of nucleotides.


In particular embodiments, a second region, when optionally present, comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a specific DNA target region. As used herein, the term “DNA target region” refers to a region of the genome or cDNA selected for analyses using the compositions and methods contemplated herein. In particular embodiments, the second region comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a specific target region is a sequence from about 20 to about 200 nucleotides, from about 30 to about 150 nucleotides, about 50 to about 150 nucleotides, about 30 to about 100 nucleotides, about 50 to about 100 nucleotides, about 50 to about 90 nucleotides, about 50 to about 80 nucleotides, about 50 to about 70 nucleotides or about 50 to about 60 nucleotides. In certain embodiments, the second region is about 60 nucleotides, or any intervening number of nucleotides.


In certain embodiments, a third region, when optionally present, comprises a tail sequence. As used herein, the term “tail sequence” refers to a polynucleotide at the 5′ end of the multifunctional capture probe module, which in particular embodiments can serve as a PCR primer binding site. In particular embodiments, the third region comprises a tail sequence that is from about 5 to about 100 nucleotides, about 10 to about 100 nucleotides, about 5 to about 75 nucleotides, about 5 to about 50 nucleotides, about 5 to about 25 nucleotides, or about 5 to about 20 nucleotides. In certain embodiments, the third region is from about 10 to about 50 nucleotides, about 15 to about 40 nucleotides, about 20 to about 30 nucleotides or about 20 nucleotides, or any intervening number of nucleotides.


In one embodiment, a multifunctional capture probe module comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide and a region capable of hybridizing to a genomic target sequence. In particular embodiments, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module comprises a region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide and a region capable of hybridizing to a genomic target sequence, the partner oligo may also function as a tail sequence or primer binding site.


In one embodiment, a multifunctional capture probe module comprises a tail region and a region capable of hybridizing to a genomic target sequence.


In various embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe comprises a specific member of a binding pair to enable isolation and/or purification of one or more captured fragments of a tagged DNA library that hybridizes to the multifunctional capture probe. In particular embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe is conjugate to biotin or another suitable hapten, e.g., dinitrophenol, digoxigenin.


The present invention further contemplates, in part, hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module to form a complex. In some embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe module substantially hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the DNA library.


Hybridization or hybridizing conditions can include any reaction conditions where two nucleotide sequences form a stable complex; for example, the tagged DNA library and multifunctional capture probe module forming a stable tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex. Such reaction conditions are well known in the art and those of skill in the art will appreciated that such conditions can be modified as appropriate and within the scope of the present invention. Substantial hybridization can occur when the second region of the multifunctional capture probe complex exhibits 100%, 99%, 98%, 97%, 96%, 95%, 94%, 93%, 92% 91%, 90%, 89%, 88%, 85%, 80%, 75%, or 70% sequence identity, homology or complementarity to a region of the tagged DNA library.


In particular embodiments, the first region of the multifunctional capture probe module does not substantially hybridize to the region of the tagged DNA library to which the second region does substantially hybridize. In some embodiments, the third region of the multifunctional capture probe module does not substantially hybridize to the region of the tagged DNA library to which the second region of the multifunctional capture probe module does substantially hybridize. In some embodiments, the first and third regions of the multifunctional capture probe module do not substantially hybridize to the region of the tagged DNA library to which the second region of the multifunctional capture probe module does substantially hybridize.


In certain embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise isolating a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex. In particular embodiments, methods for isolating DNA complexes are well known to those skilled in the art and any methods deemed appropriate by one of skill in the art can be employed with the methods of the present invention (Ausubel et al., Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, 2007-2012). In particular embodiments, the complexes are isolated using biotin-streptavidin isolation techniques. In some embodiments, the partner oligonucleotide capable of hybridizing to the first region of the multifunctional capture probe module is modified to contain a biotin at the 5′-end or 3′-end which is capable of interacting with streptavidin linked to a column, bead or other substrate for use in DNA complex isolation methods.


In particular embodiments, a first region of a multifunctional capture probe module is bound to a partner oligonucleotide. In some embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe module is bound to the partner oligonucleotide prior to formation of a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex. In some embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe module is bound to the partner oligonucleotide after the formation of a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex. In some embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe module is bound to the partner oligonucleotide simultaneously with the formation of a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex. In some embodiments, the partner oligonucleotide is chemically modified.


In particular embodiments, removal of the single stranded 3′-ends from the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex is contemplated. In certain embodiments, the methods comprise 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing of the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex to remove the single stranded 3′ ends.


In certain other embodiments, the methods comprise performing 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template.


In certain other embodiments, the methods comprise creating a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase.


A variety of enzymes can be employed for the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing of the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex. Illustrative examples of suitable enzymes, which exhibit 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic activity, that can be employed in particular embodiments include, but are not limited to: T4 or Exonucleases I, III, V (see also, Shevelev I V, Huibscher U., “The 3′ 5′ exonucleases,” Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 3(5):364-76 (2002)). In particular embodiments, the enzyme comprising 3′-5′ exonuclease activity is T4 polymerase. In particular embodiments, an enzyme which exhibits 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic activity and is capable of primer template extension can be employed, including for example T4 or Exonucleases I, III, V. Id. 3′5′


In some embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise performing PCR on the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatically processed complex discussed supra and elsewhere herein. In particular embodiments, a tail portion of a multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule. In one embodiment, the hybrid nucleic acid molecule generated comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is also contemplated. In certain embodiments a method for targeted genetic analysis comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the genomic library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In various embodiments, methods for determining copy number of a specific target region are contemplated. In particular embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module comprises selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends; d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in d); and f) quantitating the PCR reaction in e), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is also contemplated. In certain embodiments a method for targeted genetic analysis comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the genomic library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template; d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In various embodiments, methods for determining copy number of a specific target region are contemplated. In particular embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module comprises selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) performing 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of multifunctional capture probe utilizing the isolated tagged DNA library fragments as template; d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in d); and f) quantitating the PCR reaction in e), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is also contemplated. In certain embodiments a method for targeted genetic analysis comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the genomic library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) creating a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase; d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).


In various embodiments, methods for determining copy number of a specific target region are contemplated. In particular embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module comprises selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a); c) creating a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule through the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase; d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in d); and f) quantitating the PCR reaction in e), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region.


In particular embodiments, PCR can be performed using any standard PCR reaction conditions well known to those of skill in the art. In certain embodiments, the PCR reaction in e) employs two PCR primers. In one embodiment, the PCR reaction in e) employs a first PCR primer that hybridizes to the target region. In a particular embodiment, the PCR reaction in e) employs a second PCR primer hybridizes to the hybrid molecule at the target region/tail junction. In certain embodiments, the PCR reaction in e) employs a first PCR primer that hybridizes to the target region and a second PCR primer hybridizes to the hybrid molecule at the target genomic region/tail junction. In particular embodiments, the second primer hybridizes to the target region/tail junction such that at least one or more nucleotides of the primer hybridize to the target region and at least one or more nucleotides of the primer hybridize to the tail sequence. In certain embodiments, the hybrid nucleic acid molecules obtained from step e) are sequenced and the sequences aligned horizontally, i.e., aligned to one another but not aligned to a reference sequence. In particular embodiments, steps a) through e) are repeated one or more times with one or more multifunctional capture probe module complexes. The multifunctional capture probe complexes can be the same or different and designed to target either DNA strand of the target sequence. In some embodiments, when the multifunctional capture probe complexes are different, they hybridize near the same target region within the tagged DNA library. In one embodiment, one or more multifunctional capture probe hybridize within about 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, or more bp of the target region in a tagged DNA library, included all intervening distances from the target region


In some embodiments, the method can be performed using two multifunctional capture probe modules per target region, wherein one hybridizes to the “Watson” strand (non-coding or template strand) upstream of the target region and one hybridizes to the “Crick” strand (coding or non-template strand) downstream of the target region.


In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein can further be performed multiple times with any number of multifunctional probe modules, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10 or more multifunctional capture probe modules per target region any number of which hybridize to the Watson or Crick strand in any combination. In some embodiments, the sequences obtained can be aligned to one another in order to identify any of a number of differences.


In certain embodiments, a plurality of target regions are interrogated, e.g., 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000, 500000 or more in a single reaction, using one or more multifunctional probe modules.


Copy number can provide useful information regarding unique reads and duplicative reads, as well as assisting with searching for variants of known reads. As used herein, the terms “read,” “read sequence,” or “sequencing read” are used synonymously and refer to a polynucleotide sequence obtained by sequencing a polynucleotide. In particular embodiments, DNA tags, e.g., a random nucleotide tag, can be used to determine copy number of a nucleic acid sequence being analyzed.


In one embodiment, a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module comprises: (i) a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide and capable of functioning as a PCR primer and (ii) a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific genomic target region.


In various embodiments, a first region of a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module comprises a PCR primer sequence. In particular embodiments, this first region comprises a PCR primer sequence that is from about 5 to about 200 nucleotides, from about 5 to about 150 nucleotides, from about 10 to about 100 nucleotides from about 10 to about 75 nucleotides, about 10 to about 50 nucleotides, about 10 to about 40 nucleotides, about 20 to about 40 nucleotides, or about 20 to about 30 nucleotides, including any intervening number of nucleotides.


In particular embodiments, a first region of a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module is bound to a partner oligonucleotide. In certain embodiments, the multifunctional capture hybrid probe module is bound to the partner oligonucleotide prior to formation of a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex. In particular embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module is bound to the partner oligonucleotide after the formation of a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex. In some embodiments, the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module is bound to the partner oligonucleotide simultaneously with the formation of a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture hybrid probe module complex. In some embodiments, the partner oligonucleotide is chemically modified.


In various embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise performing PCR on the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex so as to copy the captured tagged DNA library sequence to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprising the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex and a sequence complementary to a region of the captured tagged DNA library sequence located 3′ or 5′ of the multifunctional capture probe sequence relative to where the hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target. In particular embodiments, the copied target region is anywhere from 1 to 5000 nt from the, 3′ or 5′-end of sequence where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target. In certain embodiments, the complementary sequence of the region that is 3′ to the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule. The hybrid nucleic acid molecule generated comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of captured tagged DNA library sequence that is located 3′ or 5′ from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the target region.


In various embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise processing a tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule (i.e., a hybrid multifunctional capture probe-isolated tagged DNA target molecule). In particular embodiments, a hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged DNA library sequence that is located 3′ relative to the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the target region. In one non-limiting embodiment, the hybrid nucleic acid molecule is generated by 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing that removes single stranded 3′-ends from an isolated tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe module complex and/or 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe.


In other particular embodiments, a hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged DNA library sequence that is located 5′ relative to the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the target region. In one non-limiting embodiment, the hybrid nucleic acid molecule is generated by the concerted action of a 5′ FLAP endonuclease, DNA polymerization and nick closure by a DNA ligase.


In various embodiments, a method for targeted genetic analysis is provided. In one embodiment, a method for targeted genetic analysis comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); c) performing PCR on the complex from b) to form a hybrid nucleic acid molecule and d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c). In particular embodiments, the hybrid nucleic acid molecules obtained from step c) are sequenced and the sequences aligned horizontally, i.e., aligned to one another but not aligned to a reference sequence. In certain embodiments, steps a) through c) are repeated one or more times with one or more multifunctional capture probe module.


The multifunctional capture probe modules can be the same or different and designed to hybridize against either strand of the genome. In some embodiments, when the multifunctional capture probe modules are different, they hybridize anywhere from 1 to 5000 nt of the same target region in the tagged DNA library.


In particular embodiments, the method can be performed twice, using two multifunctional capture probe modules, wherein one hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region (i.e., at the 5′-end; i.e., a forward multifunctional capture probe module or complex) and one hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region on the opposite genomic strand (i.e., at the 3′-end; i.e., a reverse multifunctional capture probe module or complex).


In one embodiment, one or more multifunctional capture probe hybridize within about 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, or more bp of the target region in a tagged DNA library, included all intervening distances from the target region.


In some embodiments, the method can further be performed multiple times with any number of multifunctional probe modules, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 or more multifunctional capture probe modules per target region, any number of which hybridize to the Watson or Crick strand in any combination.


In certain embodiments, a plurality of target regions are interrogated, e.g., 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000, 500000 or more in a single reaction, using one or more multifunctional probe modules.


In particular embodiments, the sequences obtained by the method can be aligned to one another in order to identify mutations and without being aligned to a reference sequence. In certain embodiments, the sequences obtained in can optionally be aligned to a reference sequence.


In various embodiments, methods for determining copy number of a specific target region are contemplated. In particular embodiments, a method for determining copy number of a specific target region comprises: a) hybridizing a tagged DNA library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module comprises selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the DNA library; b) isolating the tagged DNA library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a); c) performing PCR on the complex from b) to form a hybrid nucleic acid molecule; d) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid in c); and e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific target region. In particular embodiments, PCR can be performed using any standard PCR reaction conditions well known to those of skill in the art. In certain embodiments, the PCR reaction in d) employs two PCR primers. In particular embodiments, the PCR reaction in d) employs two PCR primers each of which hybridize to a region downstream to the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the tagged DNA library. In further embodiments, the region where the PCR primers hybridize is located in the region amplified in step c). In various embodiments, the hybrid nucleic acid molecules obtained from step c) are sequenced and the sequences aligned horizontally, i.e., aligned to one another but not aligned to a reference sequence. In particular embodiments, steps a) through c) are repeated one or more times with one or more multifunctional capture probe module. The multifunctional capture probe modules can be the same or different and designed to hybridize to either strand of the genome.


In one embodiment, one or more multifunctional capture probe hybridize within about 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, or more bp of the target region in a tagged DNA library, included all intervening distances from the target region.


In some embodiments, the method can further be performed multiple times with any number of multifunctional probe modules, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 or more multifunctional capture probe modules per target region, any number of which hybridize to the Watson or Crick strand in any combination.


In certain embodiments, a plurality of target regions are interrogated, e.g., 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000, 500000 or more in a single reaction, using one or more multifunctional probe modules.


In particular illustrative embodiments, a tagged DNA library is amplified, e.g., by PCR, to generate an amplified tagged DNA library.


All genomic target regions will have a 5′-end and a 3′-end. In particular embodiments, the methods described herein can be performed with two multifunctional capture probe complexes which provide for amplification of a targeted genomic region from both the 5′ and 3′ directions, respectively. In one embodiment, one or more multifunctional capture probe hybridize within about 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, or more bp of the target region in a tagged DNA library, included all intervening distances from the target region.


In some embodiments, the method can further be performed multiple times with any number of multifunctional probe modules, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 or more multifunctional capture probe modules per target region, any number of which hybridize to the Watson or Crick strand in any combination.


In certain embodiments, a plurality of target regions are interrogated, e.g., 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000, or more in a single reaction, using one or more multifunctional probe modules.


In particular embodiments, the targeted genetic analysis is a sequence analysis. In particular embodiments, sequence analysis comprises any analysis wherein one sequence is distinguished from a second sequence. In various embodiments, sequence analysis excludes any purely mental sequence analysis performed in the absence of a composition or method for sequencing. In certain embodiments, sequence analysis includes, but is not limited to: sequencing, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis, gene copy number analysis, haplotype analysis, mutation analysis, methylation status analysis (as determined by example, but not limited to, bisulfite conversion of unmethylated cytosine residues), targeted resequencing of DNA sequences obtained in a chromatin-immunoprecipitation experiment (CHIP-seq), paternity testing in sequence captured fetal DNA collected from pregnant maternal plasma DNA, microbial presence and population assessment in samples captured with microbe-specific capture probes, and fetal genetic sequence analysis (for example, using fetal cells or extracellular fetal DNA in maternal samples).


Copy number analyses include, but are not limited to analyses that examine the number of copies of a particular gene or mutation that occurs in a given genomic DNA sample and can further include quantitative determination of the number of copies of a given gene or sequence differences in a given sample.


Also contemplated herein, are methods for sequence alignment analysis that can be performed without the need for alignment to a reference sequence, referred to herein as horizontal sequence analysis (exemplified in, for example, FIG. 20). Such analysis can be performed on any sequences generated by the methods contemplated herein or any other methods. In particular embodiments, the sequence analysis comprises performing sequence alignments on the hybrid nucleic acid molecules obtained by the methods contemplated herein. In one embodiment, one or more multifunctional capture probe hybridize within about 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, or more bp of the target region in a tagged DNA library, included all intervening distances from the target region.


In some embodiments, the method can further be performed multiple times with any number of multifunctional probe modules, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 or more multifunctional capture probe modules per target region, any number of which hybridize to the Watson or Crick strand in any combination.


In certain embodiments, a plurality of target regions are interrogated, e.g., 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000, or more in a single reaction, using one or more multifunctional probe modules.


In particular embodiments DNA can be isolated from any biological source. Illustrative sources for DNA include, but are not limited to: blood, skin, hair, hair follicles, saliva, oral mucous, vaginal mucous, sweat, tears, epithelial tissues, urine, semen, seminal fluid, seminal plasma, prostatic fluid, pre-ejaculatory fluid (Cowper's fluid), excreta, biopsy, ascites, cerebrospinal fluid, lymph, or tissue extract sample or biopsy sample.


In one embodiment, tagged DNA libraries for use with the methods contemplated herein are provided. In some embodiments, a tagged DNA library comprises tagged genomic sequences. In particular embodiments, each tagged DNA sequence includes: i) fragmented end-repaired DNA; ii) one or more random nucleotide tag sequences; iii) one or more sample code sequences; and iv) one or more PCR primer sequences.


In one embodiment, a hybrid tagged DNA library is contemplated. In particular embodiments, a hybrid tagged DNA library comprises hybrid tagged DNA sequences. In certain embodiments, each hybrid tagged DNA sequence includes: i) fragmented end-repaired DNA comprising a target region; ii) one or more random nucleotide tag sequences; iii) one or more sample code sequences; iv) one or more PCR primer sequences; and v) a multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.


In various embodiments, kits and compositions of reagents used in the methods contemplated herein. In some embodiments, the composition includes a tagged DNA library, a multifunctional adaptor module and a multifunctional capture probe module. In particular embodiments, the composition includes a tagged genomic library. In certain embodiments, the composition includes a hybrid tagged genomic library.


In various embodiments, reaction mixtures for carrying out the methods contemplated herein are provided. In particular embodiments, the reaction mixture is a reaction mixture for performing any of the methods contemplated herein. In certain embodiments, the reaction mixture is capable generating a tagged DNA library. In some embodiments, the reaction mixture capable of generating a tagged DNA library includes: a) fragmented DNA and b) DNA end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired DNA. In particular embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises a multifunctional adaptor module. In various embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises a multifunctional capture probe module. In certain embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity and PCR amplification activity.


In various embodiments, methods for DNA sequence analysis are provided for the sequence of one or more clones contemplated herein. In one embodiment, the method comprises obtaining one or more or a plurality of tagged DNA library clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises targeted DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; performing a paired end sequencing reaction on the one or more clones and obtaining one or more sequencing reads or performing a sequencing reaction on the one or more clones in which a single long sequencing read of greater than about 100, 200, 300, 400, 500 or more nucleotides is obtained, wherein the read is sufficient to identify both the first DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence; and ordering or clustering the sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequences of the sequencing reads.


The sequence reads can be compared to one or more human reference DNA sequences. Sequence reads that do not match the reference sequence may be identified and used to create a de novo assembly from the non-matching sequence data. In particular embodiments, the de novo assemblies are used to identify novel sequence rearrangements associated with the capture probe.


In various embodiments, a method for copy number determination analysis is provided comprising obtaining one or more or a plurality of clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence and a targeted DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence. In related embodiments, a paired end sequencing reaction on the one or more clones is performed and one or more sequencing reads are obtained. In another embodiment, a sequencing reaction on the one or more clones is performed in which a single long sequencing read of greater than about 100 nucleotides is obtained, wherein the read is sufficient to identify both the first DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence. The sequencing reads of the one or more clones can be ordered or clustered according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads.


In particular embodiments, a method for determining the copy number is provided. In particular embodiments, the method comprises obtaining one or more or a plurality of clones, each clone comprising a first DNA sequence and a second DNA sequence, wherein the first DNA sequence comprises a random nucleotide tag sequence and a targeted DNA sequence and the second DNA sequence comprises a capture probe sequence; ordering or clustering sequencing reads of the one or more clones according to the probe sequence of the sequencing reads. In particular embodiments, the random nucleotide tag is about 2 to about 50 nucleotides in length.


The methods may further comprise analyzing all sequencing reads associated with a second read sequence by determining the distributions of unique and redundant sequencing reads; counting the number of times a unique read is encountered; fitting a frequency distribution of the unique reads to a statistical distribution; inferring a total number of unique reads; and normalizing the total number of inferred unique read to an assumption that humans are generally diploid.


In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein can be used to calculate an inferred copy number of one or more targeted loci and the deviation of that calculation, if any, from an expected copy number value. In certain embodiments, one or more targeted loci of a gene are grouped together in a collection of loci and the copy number measurements from the collection of targeted loci are averaged and normalized. In one embodiment, the inferred copy number of a gene can be represented by the normalized average of all the target loci representing that gene.


In various embodiments, the compositions and methods contemplated herein are also applicable to generating and analyzing RNA expression. Without wishing to be bound to any particular theory, it is contemplated that any of the methods and compositions that are used to make tagged gDNA libraries may also be used to create tagged cDNA libraries, and capture and process target regions corresponding to RNA sequences embodied in the cDNA for subsequent RNA expression analysis, including, without limitation, sequence analysis.


In various embodiments, a method for generating a tagged RNA expression library comprises first obtaining or preparing a cDNA library. Methods of cDNA library synthesis are known in the art and may be applicable to various embodiments. The cDNA library may be prepared from one or a plurality of the same or different cell types depending on the application. In one embodiment, the method comprises fragmenting a cDNA library; treating the fragmented cDNA library with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired cDNA; and ligating a multifunctional adapter molecule to the fragmented end-repaired cDNA to generate a tagged RNA expression library.


In a particular embodiment a tagged RNA expression library (cDNA library) is prepared by obtaining or preparing a cDNA library from the total RNA of one or more cells; fragmenting the cDNA library; treating the fragmented cDNA with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired cDNA; and ligating a multifunctional adapter molecule to the fragmented end-repaired cDNA to generate a tagged RNA expression library.


In certain embodiments, the cDNA library is an oligo-dT primed cDNA library.


In certain embodiments, the cDNA library is primed by random oligonucleotides comprising about 6 to about 20 random nucleotides. In particular preferred embodiments, the cDNA library is primed by random hexamers or random octamers.


The cDNA libraries may be sheared or fragmented using known methods in order to achieve a desired average library fragment size. In one embodiment, the cDNA library is fragmented to an average size of about 250 bp to about 750 bp. In a certain embodiment, the cDNA library is fragmented to an average size of about 500 bp.


In various embodiments, RNA expression libraries contemplated herein may be captured, processed, amplified, and sequenced, etc., using any of the methods contemplated herein for capturing, processing, and sequencing tagged genomic DNA libraries, without or without minor variations.


In one embodiment, a method for targeted gene expression analysis is provided comprising: hybridizing a tagged RNA expression library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the tagged RNA expression library; isolating the tagged RNA expression library-multifunctional capture probe module complex; performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing and/or 5′-3′ DNA polymerase extension on the isolated tagged RNA expression library-multifunctional capture probe module complex; performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex, wherein a tail portion (e.g., a PCR primer binding site) of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the complement of the target region, the specific multifunctional capture probe sequence and the capture module tail sequence; and performing targeted gene expression analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule.


In one embodiment, a method for targeted gene expression analysis comprises: hybridizing a tagged RNA expression library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific target region in the RNA expression library; isolating the tagged RNA expression library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex; performing PCR on the complex to form a hybrid nucleic acid molecule.


In particular embodiments, at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two hybridization steps, wherein the at least two hybridization steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each. In certain embodiments, at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes 5′ of the target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes 3′ of the target region.


In one embodiment, one or more multifunctional capture probe hybridize within about 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, or more bp of the target region in a tagged RNA expression or cDNA library, included all intervening distances from the target region.


In some embodiments, the method can further be performed multiple times with any number of multifunctional probe modules, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 or more multifunctional capture probe modules per target region, any number of which hybridize to the Watson or Crick strand in any combination.


In certain embodiments, a plurality of target regions are interrogated, e.g., 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 2500, 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000, or more in a single reaction, using one or more multifunctional probe modules.


In a further embodiment, methods for cDNA sequence analysis are provided, which allow the skilled artisan to conduct gene expression analysis from the cDNA library. In particular embodiments, any of the sequencing methods contemplated herein may be adapted to sequence the cDNA libraries with little or no deviation from their application to sequencing tagged genomic clones. As described above, the statistical distribution of tagged cDNA sequencing reads of a target region of a cDNA in the RNA expression analyses contemplated herein, correlates to the level of gene expression of the target region in a cell from which the cDNA library was prepared or obtained.


All publications, patent applications, and issued patents cited in this specification are herein incorporated by reference as if each individual publication, patent application, or issued patent were specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.


Although the foregoing invention has been described in some detail by way of illustration and example for purposes of clarity of understanding, it will be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art in light of the teachings of this invention that certain changes and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the spirit or scope of the appended claims. The following examples are provided by way of illustration only and not by way of limitation. Those of skill in the art will readily recognize a variety of noncritical parameters that could be changed or modified to yield essentially similar results.


EXAMPLES
Example 1: Preparation of Target Genomic Region for Genetic Analyses

Overview: In particular embodiments, the methods contemplated herein comprise the coordinated utilization of several key molecular modules. In the following section, each module is described separately. At the end of this section, the interconnection of modules is described.


Section 1: Tagging of Genomic DNA Fragments

Genomic DNA from an individual can be collected, processed into pure DNA, fragmented and random nucleotide sequences of one nucleotide or more, in some embodiments in the range of 2-100 nucleotides, or in the range of 2-6 nucleotides are attached to the random ends of genomic DNA fragments (FIG. 1). The combination of the introduced random nucleotide tag sequence together with the genomic fragment end sequence constitutes a unique combination of two elements that will hereafter be referred to as a the first region of the multifunctional adaptor module. The uniqueness of first region of the multifunctional adaptor module is determined by the combinatorial product of the diversity within the attached first region of the multifunctional adaptor module pool times the diversity of the genomic fragment end sequences.


Section 2: Addition of Sample-Specific Codes and Universal Amplification Sequences

Multifunctional adapter molecules can further comprise sample-specific codes (referred to herein as the second region of the multifunctional adaptor module) and universal amplification sequences (referred to herein as the PCR primer sequence or the third region of the multifunctional adaptor module). In addition to the introduced random nucleotides from the first region of the multifunctional adaptor module, each segment that is attached to fragmented genomic DNA may include an additional set of nucleotides that is common to each sample but different between samples such that the DNA sequence of this region can be used to uniquely identify a given samples sequences in a set of sequences where multiple samples have been combined together (in other words, sample barcoding). In addition, the attached nucleotide sequence may contain a universal sequence that can be used to amplify (e.g., by PCR) the polynucleotides. The combined elements of the random nucleotide tag sequence, the sample code, and the universal amplification sequence constitute an “adaptor” (also refer to as a multifunctional adaptor module) that is most commonly attached to the fragmented genomic DNA by means of nucleotide ligation.


An illustrative example of a multifunctional adaptor module ligated to fragmented gDNA are illustrated in FIG. 1 and (while not wishing to be limited by example) an exemplary set of such sequences is shown in Table 1. Within Table 1, the sets of adaptor sequences are clustered into four sets of adaptor sequences. Within each column, all adaptors share the same two base code and all 16 possible random tags are represented. The 16 possible adaptors are mixed prior to ligation to fragment. Only the top, “ligation strand” of each adaptor is shown; this is the strand that becomes covalently attached to end-repaired DNA fragments. The bottom, partner strand that is eventually lost, while shown in FIG. 1, is not included in Table 1.









TABLE 1





5′ to 3′ DNA sequence of a set of 64 tagging and


sample ID adapters



















SEQ ID

SEQ ID


Sample code AC
NO:
Sample code GA
NO:





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAAAC
1
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAAGA
17





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAACAC
2
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAACGA
18





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAGAC
3
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAGGA
19





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAATAC
4
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAATGA
20





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACAAC
5
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACAGA
21





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACCAC
6
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACCGA
22





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACGAC
7
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACGGA
23





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACTAC
8
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACTGA
24





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGAAC
9
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGAGA
25





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGCAC
10
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGCGA
26





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGGAC
11
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGGGA
27





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGTAC
12
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGTGA
28





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATAAC
13
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATAGA
29





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATCAC
14
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATCGA
30





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATGAC
15
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATGGA
31





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATTAC
16
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATTGA
32






SEQ ID

SEQ ID


Sample code CT
NO:
Sample code TG
NO:





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAACT
33
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAATG
49





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAACCT
34
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAACTG
50





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAGCT
35
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAAGTG
51





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAATCT
36
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAATTG
52





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACACT
37
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACATG
53





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACCCT
38
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACCTG
54





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACGCT
39
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACGTG
55





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACTCT
40
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACACTTG
56





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGACT
41
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGATG
57





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGCCT
42
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGCTG
58





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGGCT
43
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGGTG
59





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGTCT
44
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACAGTTG
60





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATACT
45
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATATG
61





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATCCT
46
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATCTG
62





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATGCT
47
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATGTG
63





GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATTCT
48
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACATTTG
64









The application of a single group of adaptors (i.e., a universal amplification sequence, a sample-specific code, and a set of random tags; also referred to as a multifunctional adaptor module) with a single amplification sequence on both ends of the genomic fragment has several significant advantages, including the fact that the same genomic fragment is tagged independently on its two ends. As described in the next few sections, the two strands of any given fragment are eventually separated from one another and will behave in the present invention as independent molecules. Therefore the presence of two different tags at the two ends of the same fragment becomes an advantage rather than a liability of the present invention. Additionally, there is the fact that adaptor-to-adaptor ligation events are a huge problem in next-generation library construction where the initial goal is to create amplicons with dissimilar ends. Using the methods of the present invention, the methods introduce this asymmetry later in the process and therefore identical ends are acceptable with the present invention. An unforeseen and surprising benefit of the present methods is that adaptor dimers are not observed in the library construction methods of the present invention. While not being bound by theory, present inventors contemplate that this may be because the rare adaptor dimer species that are formed rapidly form tight hairpin structures during the steps of denaturation and annealing that are necessary for PCR amplification and it is further contemplated that these hairpin structures are completely resistant to further primer-directed amplification. The ability to make adaptor-dimer free libraries is a significant technical feature in extremely low input applications like single-to-few cell genomic analysis, circulating DNA analysis (as in fetal diagnostics, tissue transplantation rejection surveillance, or cancer screening applications) or single cell transcriptome analysis. As such, the present methods provide significant utility in such applications. An additional significant feature of single-primer amplicons is that it is possible to “turn on” amplification with a PCR primer of 25 nt and to “turn off” amplification with a longer 58 nt primer. This is described in more detail, and the significance to the present invention is highlighted, in section 6-5 below.


Overall

The adaptor strategy in which a single universal amplification sequence is used on both ends of target fragments eliminates issues with adaptor dimer. This is clearly demonstrated by way of example in Example 3: Construction of single-adaptor genomic library.


Section 3: Library Quantification

An additional aspect of the present methods for genomic analysis strategy is that the “coverage depth” is known, that is, the average number of genomic copies present in a library are known or can be determined. The cover depth is measured using purified ligation reactions prior to the bulk amplification of the library that is necessary for subsequent steps. By way of illustration, if 50 genomes worth of DNA is put into the library scheme of an embodiment of the present invention and there is 100% efficient ligation of adaptors to both ends of the fragments, then the coverage depth is 100 because each adaptor end acts independently of the other, then 2 ends times 50 genomes=100 in coverage. The simple fact that adaptor-dimers do not amplify with the universal PCR primer contemplated herein but fragments adapted on both ends do means that library quantitation will simply be a matter of measuring library complexity with quantitative PCR (qPCR) using universal primer and calibrating the results against standards with known coverage depth. Here the phrase “genome copies” and “coverage depth” mean the same thing and may be used interchangeably. The present methods will carry forward anywhere from 4-1000, preferably 20-100 fold coverage depth into the next phase of sample processing according to the present invention.


Section 4: Library Amplification

In particular embodiments, a portion of the adaptor ligated genomic fragment library equivalent to 20-100 fold coverage depth will be amplified using standard PCR techniques with a single, universal primer sequence driving amplification. At this stage it is advantageous, in particular embodiments, to convert the picograms of material in the initial library into micrograms of amplified material, implying a 10,000-fold amplification.


Section 5: Hybridization of Target Library Fragments to Capture Probes

Advances in oligonucleotide synthesis chemistries have created new opportunities for sophisticated genome capture strategies. In particular, the availability of long oligonucleotides (100-200 nt in length) that have reasonable per base synthesis costs, relatively high yields, and exquisite base accuracy are now commercially available from a variety of vendors. This capability has the present inventor to create multifunctional capture probes (FIG. 2). The elements of an illustrative example of a multifunctional capture probe comprises:


Region 1 comprises a 34 nt region common to all probes that hybridizes to a modified complementary oligonucleotide (also referred to as a partner oligonucleotide). This modified oligonucleotide further comprises on the 5′ end a biotin—TEG modification that is a biotin capable of binding tightly to streptavidin protein, a long hydrophilic spacer arm that alleviates steric hindrance of biotin binding. On the 3′ end, the oligonucleotide terminates with a dideoxy-cytosine residue that renders this partner oligonucleotide inert to primer extension. This element of probe design allows for adapting an unlimited number of probes with biotin capture functionality without having to directly modify said probes.


Region 2 comprises custom 60 nt regions that are target-specific and that interact with gDNA fragment molecules. This region is designed by computational methods that account for uniqueness of sequence within the genome, the presence of common SNPs that may compromise binding efficiency, and secondary structure considerations.


Region 3 comprises a 20 nt segment that will serve as a PCR primer binding site in subsequent fragment amplification. This feature is described in further detail in the next paragraph.


A multiplicity of probes can be used to capture genomic regions of interest (multiplexing of probes). At least two probes may be employed to thoroughly query a typical coding exon of 100-150 bp in length. By way of example, this indicates that 20 probes will be used to capture a typical 10 exon gene and a total of 2000 probes will be used to interrogate a 100 gene panel. The hybridization of genomic library fragments to probes can be performed by thermal denaturation followed by reannealing. In one embodiment, the steps comprise:

    • 1. Combining genomic library fragments with pooled probe sequences (in this case “probe sequences” refers to the combination of individual probes together with an equal molar quantity of the highly modified partner oligonucleotide) at a specific target to probe ratio ranging anywhere from 1 part target to 1 part probe to 1 part target to 1,000,000 parts probe. In one embodiment, the optimal ratio is about 1 part fragment to 10,000 parts probe.
    • 2. Heating the combined fragment+probe in a solution containing 1M NaCl, 10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA and 0.1% Tween 20 (non-ionic detergent) to 95° C. for >30 sec to denature all double-strand DNA structure.
    • 3. Cooling the combined probe and fragment in controlled steps, for example 1° C. decrease in temperature every 2 minutes, down to <60° C. This slow cooling will result in duplexes between target genomic fragments and probe sequences.
    • 4. Binding of the probe: fragment complexes to carboxyl coated, streptavidin modified paramagnetic beads and “pull out” of these beads using a strong magnet.
    • 5. Washing of the bound complexes with a solution containing 25% (v/v) formamide, 10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 0.1 mM EDTA and 0.05% Tween 20. In particular embodiments, the wash step is performed at least twice.
    • 6. Resuspension of the washed beads in a solution that is amenable to the subsequent enzyme processing step(s).


Capture Reactions: Embodiments of the capture reaction are demonstrated in Example 3 (Construction of single-adaptor genomic library) and employ qPCR assays developed and further described in Example 5 (Validation of PLP1 qPCR assays).


Section 6: Enzymatic Processing of Hybridized Probe: Target Complexes

As currently practiced in the art, hybridization-based sequence capture methods generally result in a suboptimal enrichment of target sequences. From literature and commercial publications it can be estimated that, at best, about 5%-10% of reads map to their intended target sequences. The remaining reads often map near the intended target and commercial vendors have resorted to redefining “on-target” as reads that land anywhere within ˜1000 bases of the intended locus. The reasons for this “spreading” effect are incompletely understood, but they are likely a result of legitimate sequence hybridization events (see, e.g., FIG. 3).


The enzymatic processing of complexes as contemplated herein more sharply focuses the captured sequences on the exact regions of interest. In this step, a DNA polymerase that also possesses a 3′ to 5′ exonuclease activity is employed. An illustrative example of such an enzyme is T4 DNA polymerase. This enzyme will “chew off” dangling tail sequences down to the duplex region formed between the probe and target sequence. It will then copy the tail segment on the probe. See, e.g., FIG. 4. Benefits provided by this step include, but are not limited to:

    • 1. By employing this type of enzymatic processing, only those fragments that were in direct, duplexed hybridization with probe will be carried forward. The final sequencing library is a chimeric (hybrid) set of molecules derived from both the fragment and the probe.
    • 2. The probe is strand-specific and therefore the captured target has an inherent directionality to it (illustrated in FIG. 5). This means that only one of two strands generated from a single fragment will interact with probe, and processing will “focus” reads to a region 5′ of the probe sequence. At this point, the complementary strand of the fragment becomes a completely independent species. By placing directional probes on either side of a target region (e.g. an exon), the technology enables highly specific focusing of sequencing reads on target regions (FIG. 6).
    • 3. Target molecules that are legitimately cross-hybridized with target fragments (but not with probe; FIG. 3) do not acquire essential probe sequence and are therefore lost in the subsequent amplification step.
    • 4. The actual “tail” sequence of the probe becomes copied into target fragments as part of the amplification sequence. All commercially practicable sequencing platforms (e.g. Illumina's reversible terminator chemistry sequencing platforms) require sequencing libraries in which the target fragments have asymmetric ends; this is often referred to as a “forward” and a “reverse” adaptor sequence, or in the shorthand of sequencing labs, “P1” and “P2”. In particular embodiments, up to this point, fragment libraries contemplated herein have a single species on the end; called “P1”. The enzymatic processing step achieves two things. First, it “erases” (by 3′ to 5′ exonuclease activity) one of these P1 ends. Second, it “adds” (by DNA polymerase copying of the probe tail sequence) the basis of a P2 end that is dissimilar from P1.
    • 5. Enzymatically-modified target molecules with legitimate P1-P2 ends can be selectively enriched in the PCR amplification step that follows processing. This is achieved by the use of long PCR primers. In particular long primers are necessary to add the full functionality required for next-generation sequencing, and they also confer selectivity to amplification. Residual P1-P1 library fragments that are “contaminants” from the first round of amplification fail to amplify with longer P1 primers. This is a significant advantage of the present method. The initial P1-P1 library amplifies effectively with a single, 25 nt PCR primer. When this primer length is extended to 57 nt—to add sequencing functionality—these same P1-P1 molecules are not amplified to any appreciable extent. Therefore amplification of the initial library can be “turned on” with a 25 nt primer and “turned off” with a 57 nt primer.


Overall

The inability of P1-insert-P1 libraries to amplify is demonstrated Example 3 (Construction of single-adaptor genomic library). The preferential amplification of P1-insert-P2 processed DNA fragments is shown in Example 3 (Construction of single-adaptor genomic library). Example 3 further demonstrates the substantial improvement in target specificity that accompanies processing. Finally, the “sensitivity” of processing, meaning the percent of initial complexes that are processed, is demonstrated to be on the order of 10% of all captured complexes in Example 9 (Direct measurement of post-capture processing).


Section 7: Amplification and Sequencing

The core adaptor and primer sequences applied to initial proof-of-concept experiments are shown in Table 2. Enzymatically processed complex from step 6 is added directly to a PCR amplification reaction that contains full-length forward and reverse PCR primers. Following amplification, the library can be purified, quantified, loaded on a high-throughput, next-generation sequencer (in this embodiment, the libraries are configured for the Illumina reversible terminator-based platforms), and the sequence of ˜millions of fragments is determined. At this stage, single reads of >36 nt, preferably 72 or 100+ nt in length can be observed.









TABLE 2







Genesis of primer sequences











SEQ




ID


Description
Sequence (5′ to 3′)
NO:





Forward amplification primer for full-
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGA
65


length library.







Forward primer sequence present on
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACAC
66


Illumina's paired-end (PE) flow cell.







Non-palindromic 4mer of all four bases.
GTCA



This was added to make the read 1




sequencing primer the same length and




position as the Illumina standard.







ACA2. PCR primers ACA2 and CAC3
TGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA
67


predate NuGEN







ACA2 forward sequencing primer (FSP)-
ACACGTCATGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATA
68


read 1
CA






ACA2 full length forward amplification
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACGT
69


primer (FLFP). Final length = 58 nt.
CATGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA






Reverse amplification primer for full-
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACG
70


length library.







PE flow cell reverse primer
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGAT
71





These are the nine 5′ bases from the
GTGACTGG



TruSeq Reverse adaptor that were inserted




to create a read 2 primer site







CAC3 reverse primer
CACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCAC
72





CAC3 reverse sequencing primer (RSP)-
GTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTC
73


read 2
AC






CAC3 full length reverse primer (FLRP).
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGTGACTG
74


Final length = 57 nt.
GCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCAC









Section 8. Data Analysis.

There are at least two major aspects to post-sequencing data analysis. The first is the identification of sequence variants—single nucleotide variants, micro-insertions and/or micro-deletions relative to an established set of reference sequences. While complex, these methods are well documented in the field and one of skill in the art would understand such methods. The second is the determination of copy number variation from the targeted sequencing data.


Example 2: Copy Number Determinations

Copy number determination finds a variety of uses in the field of DNA sequencing. By way of non-limiting example, massive parallel DNA sequencing technologies provide at least two opportunities to interrogate and analyze biological samples. One well-established aspect is determination of DNA sequences, meaning the de novo sequences present in the sample (e.g., the sequencing of a newly isolated microbe) or the resequencing of known regions for variants (e.g., the search for variants within known genes). A second aspect of massive parallel sequencing is quantitative biology and the ability to count the number of times a particular sequence is encountered. This is a fundamental aspect of technologies like “RNA-seq” and “CHIP-seq”, where counting is used to infer gene expression or the association of a particular protein with genomic DNA, respectively. This example relates to the quantitative, counting-based aspects of DNA sequencing.


DNA fragments are most often counted as constellations of sequences that share high degrees of similarity (i.e., they align to specific regions of a known genomic sequence). Often the sequences within these clusters are identical. Note that DNA sequences with either a) different starting and ending DNA sequence reads or b) with high quality sequence differences from other reads within the set are most often considered “unique reads”. Thus, different starting sequence location and sequence variation are one form of “tagging” that is used to differentiate unique events from clones. In the present example, random nucleotide tags (e.g., random six nucleotide sequences) are also introduced onto genomic fragments during the course of library construction. The combination of 1) the random nucleotide tag sequence with 2) the start point of the DNA sequencing read and 3) the actual sequence of the read collectively make up a tag. This tag enables one to differentiate between convergent events where the same fragment was cloned twice (such fragments will have different random nucleotide tag sequences that were introduced during library construction) and fragments of the same origin that were replicated during library amplification (these “clones” will have the same random nucleotide segment and the same clone start points). This type of tagging further enables quantitative analysis of genomic DNA specifically, and populations of DNA molecules (e.g., RNA-seq libraries) more generally.


The introduction of random nucleotide tags (random Nmer combined with DNA clone ends) into DNA sequencing libraries allows, in theory, each unique clone within the library to be identified by its unique tag sequence. The specification of“in theory” acknowledges confounding features of ordinary experimental data sets that may occur such as errors in sequencing, errors introduced during library amplification, introduction of contaminating clones from other libraries, etc. All of these sources can and will confound the theoretical consideration posed here. In the context of sequence capture and targeted resequencing, the tagging of libraries can enable quantitative analysis of locus copy number within a captured library.


Consider, by way of non-limiting example, a library constructed from the equivalent of 100 diploid genomes of input that was created from a male subject. The prediction is that approximately 200 library clones will be present at each autosomal locus, and 100 clones will be present at each X-chromosome locus. If an autosomal region is captured and sequenced 2000 times, then all 200 tags will be encountered with a confidence interval exceeding 99% certainty. For the X-chromosomal region, 2000 reads would, in theory, reveal a total of 100 tags. By way of illustration, this example supports the general concept that the creation of DNA tags within a DNA sequencing library can preserve copy number differences. This general framework can be applied to the methods described herein. Empirical evidence suggest that adjustments may need to be made for differences in cloning efficiencies on a locus-by-locus basis, for sporadic introduction of artifactual tags from experimental error, etc. The implementation of this concept into practice may differ in different contexts and may involve case-by-case sequence analysis methods, but the general principle outlined here will underlie all such applications.


To this point, the creation of tagged DNA libraries has been considered in the context of genomic DNA analysis, yet it must be emphasized that this concept applies to all counting-based DNA sequencing applications. In particular embodiments, tagging may be applied to RNA-seq, where cDNA molecules produced from mRNA of a sample are cloned by methods that create tags. Such approaches may substantially increase the fidelity of sequence-based gene expression analysis. In certain embodiments, it is contemplated that tagging can increase the resolution of chromatin immunoprecipitation (CHIP-seq) experiments. In various embodiments, tagging will enhance the quantitative aspects of sequence counting used to determine the presence and abundance of microbes in microbiome compartments and environmental samples.


Example 3: Construction of Single Adaptor Genomic Library

Purpose:


The goal of this example was to create a genomic DNA library from acoustically fragmented ProMega female hgDNA (˜200 bp).


Summary:


The results clearly demonstrated the significant features of the present methods for adaptor design. In particular, the adaptor-alone ligation reaction had no detectable adaptor dimer species present. This was very significant in the context of extremely low input sequencing library preparation technology, as with current methods, the limits of input are invariably determined by the background levels of adaptor dimer. Highly specialized technologies have been applied in attempts to keep adaptor dimer contamination in check. These include size exclusion methods such as columns or gel purification, expensive custom oligonucleotide modifications designed to minimize adaptor self-ligation events, and adaptor sequence modifications that allow for restriction digestion destruction of adaptor dimers following library construction.


The simple, single adaptor, single primer concept contemplated herein addresses the adaptor dimer issue with a simple solution that evokes the basic principles of DNA structural principles. This extremely low input technology will be useful for the construction of genomic libraries for genomic analysis, for transcriptome analysis of cloned double-stranded cDNA as, for example, in RNA-seq applications of one or a few specific cells, and in rescuing the few intact fragments that may be present in a highly modified, poorly preserved formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) nucleic acid sample.


Another essential feature of the adaptor design of the present invention is the ability to “turn on” and “turn off” PCR amplification of the target amplicon library by using different PCR primer lengths. As has been clearly demonstrated, the optimal primer length for library amplification was 25 nt primer species with a projected Tm (under standard ionic strength conditions)≥55° C. A shorter, lower Tm primer displayed less efficient amplification of and appeared to favor amplicons with smaller average insert sizes. There is ample precedent that primers in this size class work well when paired with opposite primers of dissimilar sequence.


Taken together, these data demonstrated that the adaptor and PCR amplification methods of the present invention produce adaptor-dimer-free fragment libraries with “tunable, on/off” amplification properties.


Methods

Hydrated primers that were received from IDT to 100 μM in TEzero (10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 0.1 mM EDTA).


Fragment Repair:


Thawed gDNA and 500 ng gDNA was end repaired by combining:

    • 14 μL water
    • 5 μL hgDNA
    • 2.5 μL 10× end repair buffer
    • 2.5 μL 1 mM dNTPs
    • Mix and add 1 μL end repair enzyme and 0.5 μL PreCR enzyme repair mix.


The mixture was incubated at 20° C. for 30 min and 70° C. for 10 min; and held at 10° C.


Adaptor Annealing:


Combined 68 μL of TEzero, 2 μL of 5M NaCl, 20 L of oligo 11 and 10 μL of oligo 12. Heated to 95° C. for 10 sec, 65° C. for 5 min and cooled to RT.









TABLE 3







Adapter sequences Adap_P23 and Adapt_L23











SEQ






ID
Oligo





NO:
ID
Name
Sequence
Description





75
11
Adap_P23
TCCGTGTATTCGAAT
Number 23 of the initial 64






adapter set, partner strand





23
12
Adap_L23
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATAC
Number 23 of the initial 64





ACGGA
adapter set, ligation strand









Ligations:


Combined in a total volume of 20 μL; 1=no insert, 2=100 ng end-repaired hgDNA.

    • 13 μL or 8 μL water
    • 0 or 5 μL end-repaired fragment=100 ng.
    • 2 μL 10× T4 ligase buffer
    • 3 μL 50% PEG8000
    • 1 μL 10 μM ACA2 adaptor #23 duplex
    • Mix and add 1 μL of T4 DNA ligase


Incubated at 23° C. for 30 min and 65° C. for 10 min. Added 80 μL/rxn of TEz and 120 μL of beads. Mixed and incubated at RT for 10 min. Washed twice with 200 μL aliquots of 70% EtOH:water v/v and resuspended in 50 μL of TEz.


PCR Amplification:


Each 10 μL aliquot of ligation mix=20 ng of library. Planned to amplify for 18 cycles.









TABLE 4







Reaction mixtures










100 μL
600 μL















Water
50
300



10X STD Taq buffer
10
60



25 mM MgCl2
10
60



10 μM PCR primer
10
60



Template
10
60



DMSO
5
30



10 mM dNTPs
5
30



Taq polymerase
1
6










Made 600 μL mix containing all components except primer and template. Made 6 of 80 μL aliquots. Added 10 μL no insert ligation to set 1 and 10 μL of hgDNA insert to set 2. Added 10 μM primer of the primers shown below in pairs to the no insert and hgDNA insert ligation mixes. Mixed. Thermal cycled for 18 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec and 72° C.-60 sec; finish for 2 min at 72° C. and held at 10° C.









TABLE 5







Primer sequences










SEQ





ID
Oligo




NO:
ID
Name
Sequence





76
3
ACA2_20
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA





77
5
ACA2
TGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA





78
8
ACA2_FLFP
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCACACGTCATGCAGGA





CCAGAGAATTCGAATACA









Purified PCR product with 120 μL of beads. Washed twice with 200 μL of 70% EtOH. Dry beads and elute DNA with 50 μL of TEz. Analyzed 5 μL of each sample on a 2% agarose gel.


Results

The exact same gel image is shown in four different color and contrast schemes in FIG. 7. The samples loaded on the gel were:

    • 1. No insert, adaptor-only ligation amplified with ACA2 20
    • 2. No insert, adaptor-only ligation amplified with ACA2 (normal 25 nt PCR primer)
    • 3. No insert, adaptor-only ligation amplified with ACA2 FLFP (full length forward primer)
    • 4. 20 ng of ˜200 bp hgDNA insert+adaptor ligation amplified with ACA2 20
    • 5. 20 ng of ˜200 bp hgDNA insert+adaptor ligation amplified with ACA2 (normal 25 nt PCR primer)
    • 6. 20 ng of ˜200 bp hgDNA insert+adaptor ligation amplified with ACA2 FLFP (full length forward primer)


It was clear that there was no amplified material in the adaptor alone ligation→PCR products (lanes 1-3). The shorter, 20 nt ACA2 primer showed inefficient amplification (lane 4) relative to the “normal”, 25 nt ACA2 primer (lane 5). Only the faintest trace of material was visible with the 58 nt ACA2 FLFP primer (lane 6).


In further embodiments, it may be useful to titrate in the amount of the ACA2 primer and monitor yield. Normal high-yield PCR primers possess 1 μM of both the forward and reverse primers for a total of 2 μM in primer (per 100 μL PCR reaction). Therefore, addition of ACA2 to 2 μM (since it is both the forward and reverse primer) may increase yield. Similarly, in particular embodiments, it may be useful to monitor amplification characteristics of libraries at primer annealing temperatures lower than 60° C.


Example 4: Fragmentation of gDNA

Purpose:


For initial proof-of principle experiments sheared human gDNA from male and female was needed. The present example employs human female and male gDNA from Promega. Based on quantities shown on the tubes, these were diluted to 1000 μL of 100 ng/L DNA and subjected them to Covaris conditions that were intended to generate fragments in the range of 200 bp.


Summary:


There are at least two components to the laboratory research infrastructure. One is the ability to quantify DNA, and the other is the ability to visualize the size distribution of DNA on gels. In the present example, the Qubit 2.0 instrument from Life Technologies was employed to measure DNA concentration. It was found that the readings recorded were generally lower than our previous experience with Nanodrop. The Qubit reading was based on dsDNA-specific dye binding and fluorescence. One major advantage of the Qubit is that it can be used to quantify DNA amplification reactions (e.g. PCR) without prior clean-up. In these experiments it was found that the Promega gDNA thought to be 100 ng/μL was measured at ˜60 ng/μL by Qubit. With respect to gels and qualitative assessment of size distribution, there was electrophoresis and documentation that the system that worked effectively. In the present example, fragmented gDNA was found to have a mean size distribution centered on the desired ˜200 bp.


Methods and Results:


After Covaris treatment, DNA concentrations were measured using the Qubit instrument. The gDNA was diluted 10-fold, and 2 μL were added to 200 μL final volume of assay solution. The reading for both female and male samples registered at ˜60 ng/mL, meaning the starting solutions are 60 ng/μL. While this was below what was initially anticipated, it was well within the appropriate range for particular embodiments. We then loaded 2 μL (120 ng) and 5 μL (300 ng) of both pre-fragmented and post-fragmented material on a 2% agarose gel (FIG. 8). In the top row, the labels stand for M—male gDNA and F—female gDNA. In the bottom row, the labels are U—unfragmented and C— Covaris fragmented. One important observation was that the average fragment size was an even distribution centered around 200 bp.


Example 5: Validation of PLP1 qPCR Assays

Purpose:


The proteolipid protein 1 (PLP1) gene on chromosome X was examined for initial proof-of-concept capture studies. This gene was chosen because it is relevant to cancer and resides on the X chromosome, meaning it has a natural copy variation between males and females. The 187 nt exon 2 region of Ref-Seq transcript NM000533.3 of PLP1 was used as the target region. For proof of principle studies, the ability to monitor regions in and around PLP1 exon2 by qPCR was needed. This example provides description of the design and validation of eight such assays.


Summary:


Eight qPCR assays were designed (in this case, meaning simple primer pairs) to monitor PLP1 exon 2 capture. Five were on-target, meaning they are within a region targeted by capture probes. Two are “near-target,” meaning one assay is positioned at a genomic coordinate 200 bp of the target region and one assay is positioned 1000 bp from the target region on the opposite strand. These two assays were designed to quantify “spreading”, the phenomenon where region near-by the target locus are pulled along as “hitch-hikers” in capture experiments. Finally, one assay was designed against a region of chromosome 9, and it is designed to monitor an arbitrary and unrelated segment of human gDNA. Here, the example shows that all eight assays produce a PCR fragment that is consistent with the predicted sizes of the amplicons. The example showed that the PLP1 assays, which were situated on chromosome X, appropriately had higher specific activities per ng of input gDNA in females than in males. These data validated the use of these assays in further experiments to monitor gDNA capture.


Method, Results, and Discussion:


A 400 bp region centered around the PLP1 exon 2 was submitted to PRIMER3 for generation of amplicons that were 80-100 bp in length, for primers that were 24 nt in length, on average, and that had Tms of 60°-65° C. The search region was manipulated to obtain primer pairs (qPCR amplicons) that “walk” from the 5′ intron-exon boundary of exon 2 through the CDS and into the 3′ exon-intron boundary. Nearby, proximity capture assays were also designed that were distal to exon 2, toward exon 3, and positioned ˜200 nt and ˜1000 nt away from exon 2. These would be used to monitor “hitchhiker” genomic fragments that are captured in secondary hybridization events. Finally, one assay was created on chr9 to monitor bulk genomic DNA levels during experiments. The primer sequences of these assays are shown below and the details are appended to the end of this example.









TABLE 6







qPCR primer sequences “walking” the 5′ introns-exon boundary of PLP1 exon 2


through the CDS












SEQ ID





Assay
NO:
Name
Sequence
Description





Assay 1
79
F1
TTAGAGTGCTGTGCAAGATGTCTG
Forward qPCR primer that sits






within PLP1 exon2



80
R1
ACCCCAAAGAAACACAATCCAGT
Reverse qPCR primer that sits






within PLP1 exon2





Assay 2
81
F2
GCCACTGGATTGTGTTTCTTTG
Forward qPCR primer that sits






within PLP 1 exon2



82
R2
TCAATTAGCTTTTCTGTGCCAGTG
Reverse qPCR primer that sits






within PLP1 exon2





Assay 3
83
F3
ACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGGACAT
Forward qPCR primer that sits






within PLP1 exon2



84
R3
TCTTGGTAGTTTTTGGAGAAATAGGTC
Reverse qPCR primer that sits






within PLP1 exon2





Assay 4
85
F4
ttcttcttccccagGCTTGTTAGA
Forward qPCR primer that sits






within and flanks upstream region






of PLP1 exon2 (lower case).



86
R4
CACCCCAAAGAAACACAATCCAGT
Reverse qPCR primer that sits






within and flanks upstream region






of PLP1 exon2 (lower case).





Assay 5
87
F5
CCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAA
Forward qPCR primer that sits






within and flanks downstream






region of PLP1 exon2 (lower






case).



88
R5
tgggagggcaggtacttacACATT
Reverse qPCR primer that sits






within and flanks downstream






region of PLP1 exon2 (lower






case).





Assay 6
89
F6
CCCCTTGTTTTCTTACACGTGTTCT
Forward qPCR primer that is 200






bp downstream of PLP1 exon2



90
R6
CCTCCCTTGGCTTCTCCATACCTA
Reverse qPCR primer that is 200






bp downstream of PLP1 exon2





Assay 7
91
F7
GTGTGTCATTGTTTGGGAAAATGG
Forward qPCR primer that is






1000 bp downstream of PLP1






exon2 (actually in exon3)



92
R7
CACCCCTTGTTATTGCCACAAAAT
Reverse qPCR primer that is 1000






bp downstream of PLP1 exon2






(actually in exon3)





Assay 8
93
F8
TACCAGCCAAGCCCATACTAGAGG
Forward qPCR primer unlinked to






chrX PLP1 locus that sits in chr9



94
R8
GGGATCAACAGTGGCATAATTGAA
Reverse qPCR primer unlinked to






chrX PLP1 locus that sits in chr9









To validate primer pair performance, PCR reactions were set-up that contained either male or female genomic DNA as template. These were then amplified by real-time PCR on the Illumina Eco instrument or by conventional PCR. The reasoning was that by qPCR, female should have slightly more PLP1 (chrX) signal than male. By conventional PCR, we were able to check amplicon size and uniqueness. Both tests yielded data consistent with the interpretation that all eight assays performed well.


PCR Reaction Set Up:


For each female or male PCR reaction, a 250 μL master mix was made on ice containing:

    • 100 μL of water
    • 25 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer
    • 25 μL 25 mM MgCl2
    • 25 μL of 60 ng/μL sheared gDNA (female and male were the same concentration by Qubit)
    • 12.5 μL DMSO
    • 12.5 μL 10 mM dNTPs
    • 6.25 μL EvaGreen dye (Biotum)
    • 5 μL ROX dye (InVitrogen)
    • Mix well and add 2.5 μL Taq DNA polymerase.









TABLE 7







Cq values from PLP1 qPCR assay validation
















Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8



chrX
chrX
chrX
chrX
chrX
chrX
chrX
chr9


















F
23.27371
24.01229

24.19554
22.3413
22.10594
22.65759
22.31407



23.33794
22.49233
23.87286
22.53665
22.49127
22.19686
22.73586
22.0446



22.33889
22.40355
23.68538
22.50178
22.42961
22.23099
22.83415
22.32891


M
24.00953
23.56869

23.2648
23.51487
23.11367
23.65077
22.15477



23.63462
23.48547
23.95081
23.18794
23.25046
22.93675
23.66965
21.23208



23.77216
23.16852
24.16562
23.21774
22.93373
22.95635
23.61168
22.16391


F
22.98351
22.96939
23.77912
22.51921
22.42073
22.17793
22.74253
22.2292


M
23.80544
23.40756
24.05821
23.22349
23.23302
23.00226
23.64403
21.85026


M − F
0.8
0.4
0.3
0.7
0.8
0.8
0.9
−0.4









For the experiment, 24 μL of mix was aliquoted into two sets of 8 strip tubes (female or male) and added 6 μL of primer mix that contained 10 μM of the forward and reverse primers from each assay. After mixing, three identical 5 μL amounts were aliquoted into columns of a 48-well Eco PCR plate (triplicate female on top in columns, triplicate male samples in columns on the bottom). The instrument was set to monitor SYBR and ROX and to cycle to 95° C. for 30 sec, 60° C. for 30 sec and 72° C. for 30 sec for 40 cycles. A JPG image of the amplification traces for assay 6 is shown in FIG. 9. The copy difference between the female and male samples was clear. All of the “Cq” values were gathered (value where the fluorescence curve passes some auto-defined baseline) for the female and male samples, then differences between averages of triplicate measurements were calculated. This is shown in Table 7 above (bottom line=M-F), where all values are positive except for the chr9 assay. The overall data indicated that all eight assays perform similarly (Cq values from 22-24) and that the chrX assays generally had a higher signal in females.


The conventional PCR reaction was cycled for 30 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec and 72° C.-30 sec; 72° C. rest for 2 min, 10° C. hold. A total of 5 μL of product was loaded directly on a 2% agarose gel without purification and is shown in FIG. 10. The upper bands of each doublet were consistent with the projected mobility of the assay PCR products. The lower “fuzzy” material was most likely unused PCR primers.


From the results of real-time PCR and of conventional PCR followed by gel analysis it can be concluded that these eight assays amplify their intended regions exclusively and that they are suitable for monitoring fragment enrichment.


Example 5 Appendix: Details on Assay Design

PLP1 gene: Transcript ID NM 000533.3; Exon 2-187 nt; CDS2 From UCSC browser. CDS in BOLD UPPERCASE UNDERLINED; primer sequences are in italics.


Flanking Sequence in Lowercase














SEQ




ID




NO:
NAME
SEQUENCE

















95
Forward strand
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag




aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac






tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





96
Reverse complement
tccaccccagtcccctgctagttactaaggtactgaagagtt




ctctatctccaggatggagagagggaaaaaaaagatgggtct




gtgtgggagggcaggtacttacACATTGATGAGATACTCATA




GTCTTGGTAGTTTTTGGAGAAATAGGTCTCAATTAGCTTTTC




TGTGCCAGTGAGGGCTTCATGTCCACAGCCACAGAACAGTGC




CACCCCAAAGAAACACAATCCAGTGGCCACCAGGGAAGCAAA




GGGGGCCCCTACCAGACATCTTGCACAGCACTCTAACAAGCc




tggggaagaagaaggggaaacagtcaggcacatccagtaggt




agctcatgccactcaaacccctctgccaggccctgtgctcac




aggctcggagatagtgggcac





97
qPCR assay 1, 77nt:
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag




aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac






tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC






AAG
custom-character

GTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC








TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





98
qPCR assay 2, 83 nt:
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag




aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac






tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





99
qPCR assay 3, 81 nt:
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag




aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac






tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





100
qPCR assay 4, 97 nt:
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag




aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac






tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





101
qPCR assay 5,95 nt:
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag




aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac






tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





102
qPCR assay 6,200 bp
CCCCTTGTTTTCTTACACGTGTTCTgacttctgctaggtgtg



distal to exon 2, 100bp
gttcatattgcccaagttggagcctccagcgtagTAGGTATG



product
GAGAAGCCAAGGGAGG



>chrX: 103040918 + 103041017




100bp






103
qPCR assay 7, 1000 bp
GTGTGTCATTGTTTGGGAAAATGGctaggacatcccgacaag



distal to exon 2 (in exon
gtgatcatcctcaggATTTTGTGGCAATAACAAGGGGTG



3), 81 bp product




>chrX: 103041614 + 103041694




81bp






104
qPCR assay 8, unlinked
TACCAGCCAAGCCCATACTAGAGGctgtccccagatgctagc



assay on chr 9, 96 bp
aaccatctgattgaataaccatctgtatcaTTCAATTATGCC



product
ACTGTTGATCCC



>chr9: 103041653 + 103041748




96bp









Example 6: Capture of PLP1 Exon 2

Purpose:


In one embodiment, the Clearfork Bioscience v1.0 DNA capture strategy entails the use of multifunctional probes targeted at specific genomic target regions. The goal was to validate the approach using Ultramers™ (Integrated DNA Technologies (IDT), Coralville, Iowa; ultramers is the trade name given to specialty synthesis synthetic oligonucleotides ranging in length from 45-200 nt) targeted to PLP1 exon 2.


Summary:


In this example, the capture reaction was demonstrated. Ultramers from IDT-DNA worked well for capture; the basic protocol through the capture step in terms of reagent stochiometries was sound; and PEG molecular crowding agent interfered with effective capture. Post capture enzymatic processing was subsequently addressed.


Brief Description:


The multifunctional probes are diagrammed in FIG. 2. The goal of this experimental data set was to test all three features of these probes. Region 1 was the binding site for a 34 nt universal, 5′ biotin-TEG and 3′ dideoxycytosine-modified universal “pull-down” oligo. Two of these universal regions were designed to validate/verify equivalent (hopefully) performance.


The sequences of these two universal oligos are shown below in Table 8.









TABLE 8







Pull-down oligo sequences targeting PLP exon 2:










SEQ ID





NO:
Name
Sequence
Description





105
Univ_seq_1
/5BioTEG/CACTGGACTATGTAGT
One of two 5′ biotin-TEG and 3′




ACCTCACTCAGCAATAC/3ddC/
dideoxycytosine modified





universal capture oligos





106
Univ_seq_10
/5BioTEG/GGCAACGAACGGACTG
One of two 5′ biotin-TEG and 3′




GAATCTACGGTCACCAA/3ddC/
dideoxycytosine modified





universal capture oligos









Below is a brief description of how these sequences were selected. The functional role of these oligos was to hybridize to capture probes and to thereby provide a stably bound biotin extension that could be used for capture on streptavidin modified magnetic beads.


10 random sequences were generated by a random DNA sequence generator set to have a rough base composition of 50% GC. The University of California, Riverside Computing and Communications web site was used. The ten sequences were then screened by BLAT to the hg19 build of the human genome. Only sequence 3 showed a significant alignment. The two sequences ending in “C” were chosen since these could be blocked with ddC. Both sequences were analyzed by the IDT OligoAnalyzer. Sequence 1 is 47% GC and has a 76° C. melting temp in 1M NaCl. Sequence 2 has a 57% GC content and an 86° C. melting temp in high salt. The sequences selected, 1 and 10, are the actual “universal” 5′ Biotin TEG-ddC complementary probe sequences. The reverse complements of these were used as the tails on capture probes. These sequences were subsequently altered by adding four bases, A, G, C and T, to increase the length to 34 bases. This length worked well with SBC and there was no compelling reason to change. Second, some of the CGCG type motifs were disrupted to lower self-dimer formation.


Region 2 encompassed the portion of the probe that was designed to contact genomic sequences in sample genomic libraries. In this experiment, the target region was exon 2 of PLP1. The DNA sequence of PLP1 exon 2 is shown below. The CDS exon 2 is highlighted in BOLD UPPERCASE UNDERLINED type. The evenly spaced-capture probe sequences are shaded.














SEQ




ID




NO:
NAME
SEQUENCE







107
Forward
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcagaggggtttgag



strand


tggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgactgtttccccttcttcttcccca








g
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGCAAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCT







GGTGGCCACTGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGGAC







ATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTATTTCTCCAAAAAC








TACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGTgtaagtacctgccctcccacacag






acccatcttttttttccctctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtac





cttagtaactagcaggggactggggtgga









Region 3 was complementary to a validated PCR primer called CAC3. The sequence of the CAC3 PCR primer is:









(SEQ ID NO: 72)









CACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCAC.






The sequences of the ultramers that include these probe regions are shown in Table 9.









TABLE 9







Sequences of ultramers used in the PLP1 exon 2 capture










SEQ ID





NO:
Name
Sequence
Description





108
B1_PLP1ex2_p1
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTTGAGTGGCAT
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




GAGCTACCTACTGGATGTGCCTGACTGTTTCC
exon 2 and compatible




CCTTCTTCTTCCCCAGGGTATTGCTGAGTGAG
with Universal seq 1




GTACTACATAGTCCAGTG






109
B1_PLP1ex2_p2
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACATGTCTGGTAGG
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




GGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCACTGGAT
exon 2 and compatible




TGTGTTTCTTTGGGGTGGTATTGCTGAGTGAG
with Universal seq 1




GTACTACATAGTCCAGTG






110
B1_PLP1ex2_p3
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCTTGGTAGTTTT
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




TGGAGAAATAGGTCTCAATTAGCTTTTCTGTG
exon 2 and compatible




CCAGTGAGGGCTTCATGGTATTGCTGAGTGAG
with Universal seq 1




GTACTACATAGTCCAGTG






111
B1_PLP1ex2_p4
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACATCTCCAGGATG
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




GAGAGAGGGAAAAAAAAGATGGGTCTGTGTGG
exon 2 and compatible




GAGGGCAGGTACTTACGGTATTGCTGAGTGAG
with Universal seq 1




GTACTACATAGTCCAGTG






112
B10_PLP1ex2_p1
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTTGAGTGGCAT
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




GAGCTACCTACTGGATGTGCCTGACTGTTTCC
exon 2 and compatible




CCTTCTTCTTCCCCAGGTTGGTGACCGTAGAT
with Universal seq 10




TCCAGTCCGTTCGTTGCC






113
B10_PLP1ex2_p2
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACATGTCTGGTAGG
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




GGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCACTGGAT
exon 2 and compatible




TGTGTTTCTTTGGGGTGTTGGTGACCGTAGAT
with Universal seq 10




TCCAGTCCGTTCGTTGCC






114
B10_PLP1ex2_p3
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCTTGGTAGTTTT
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




TGGAGAAATAGGTCTCAATTAGCTTTTCTGTG
exon 2 and compatible




CCAGTGAGGGCTTCATGTTGGTGACCGTAGAT
with Universal seq 10




TCCAGTCCGTTCGTTGCC






115
B10_PLP1ex2_p4
GAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACATCTCCAGGATG
Ultramer targeted to PLP1




GAGAGAGGGAAAAAAAAGATGGGTCTGTGTGG
exon 2 and compatible




GAGGGCAGGTACTTACGTTGGTGACCGTAGAT
with Universal seq 10




TCCAGTCCGTTCGTTGCC









Considerations about Moles, Micrograms and Molecules:


The genomic library constructed in Example 3 (hgDNA library from Promega female) was used. A large scale (800 μL) amplification of this library was performed starting with 20 μL of ligation mix as input. The purified library (400 μL) had a final concentration of 22 ng/μL. One microgram per experiment described here was used. Furthermore, based on the total adaptor being 50 bp and the inserts being 150-200 bp, there was an assumption that 75% of the library mass is genomic DNA. Based on this assumption, and that one human genome has a mass 3 pg, then there were roughly (750×10−9/3×10−12=250,000) 250,000 copies of any given genomic region present. Previous experience and literature suggested that a 10,000-fold molar excess of probes is a reasonable place to start. This implies 2,500,000,000 molecules of probe. 2.5×109 molecules/6.02×1023 molecules/mole=4.15×1015 moles=4 amol probe. Translating this to volume of a stock solution, 1 μL of 4 nM (in each probe)=4 amol of probe. Finally, Invitrogen's MyOne strep-coated C1 beads bind about 1 pmol of biotinylated 500 bb dsDNA/1 μL of beads. In this experiment, a total of 4 amol×4 probes=16 amol in probe were added. 1 μL of beads binds 1000 amol, 1 μL is a practical amount of beads to work with, and 1 μL of beads is a 60-fold excess of binding capacity over added probe. Therefore, in this example the following parameters were calculated:

    • the number of target molecules in a unit mass of library (250,000 copies of a unique diploid locus/1 μg of library);
    • the molarity of probe necessary to address the target loci with a 10,000-fold molar excess of probe (4 amol of each probe, 16 amol total probe (4 probes), 1 μL of a 4 nM solution of probes; and
    • the amount of beads necessary to quantitatively capture all of the added probe (1 μL binds 1000 amol of dsDNA and/or unbound probe).


Buffers and Working Solutions

Solution 1—binding probes: hydrated universal binding partners and PLP1 probes to 100 μM. In two separate tubes, combined 92 μL TEz+0.05% Tween-20 buffer, 4 μL universal oligo and 1 μL each of the four cognate (with the universal oligo) probes. This generated two of 1 μM stock probe solution. Diluted each of these 4 μL into 1000 μL of TEz+Tween to provide a 4 nM working solution of probes.


4× Binding buffer=4M NaCl, 40 mM Tris pH 8.0, 0.4 mM EDTA, and 0.4% Tween 20. Made 50 mls by combining 40 mls of 5M NaCl, 2 mls of 1M Tris pH 8.0, 2 mls of 10% Tween20, 40 μL of 0.5 M EDTA and 6 mls of water.


Wash buffer=25% formamide, 10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 0.1 mM EDTA and 0.05% Tween 20. Made 50 mls by combining 37 mls of water, 12.5 mls of formamide, 500 μL of 1M Tris pH8.0, 10 μL of 0.5M EDTA, and 250 μL of 10% Tween 20.


Beads. Combined 250 μL of 4× bind and 750 μL of water to make 1× binding buffer. Added 10 μL of beads to 90 μL of 1× bind, pulled aside with magnet, washed the beads 2× with 100 μL of 1× bind, and resuspended washed beads in 100 μL 1× bind. Ten microliters of washed beads is equivalent to 1 μL of beads as they come out of the manufacturer's tube.


Methods

The following three parameters were tested:

    • 1. Universal biotin oligo 1 versus oligo 10;
    • 2. Binding in 1× bind versus 1× bind plus 7.5% PEG8000 (a molecular crowding agent that may enhance the rate of annealing); and
    • 3. Fold-enrichment of PLP1 region after straight binding and after binding plus enzymatic processing


To test these parameters eight samples (2×2×2) were generated. These samples contained 50 μL of 20 ng/μL genomic DNA, 25 μL of 4× binding buffer, 1 μL of binding probes and either 24 μL of water or 20 μL of 50% PEG8000+4 μL of water (four sample with and 4 samples without PEG). From the IDT DNA website OligoAnalyzer, it was described that the Tm of oligos shifts to dramatically higher temperatures in high salt (e.g., 1M NaCl). Thus, the sample was melted at 95° C. and then dropped the temperature in 1° C. and 2 min increments to 60° C. (35 cycles of AutoX on our ABI2720 thermal cycler where each cycle drops by one degree and each cycle lasts 2 min). After the samples cooled to room temperature (RT), 10 μL of washed beads were added per sample and incubated for 20 min. The beads were pulled out with a strong magnet and the solution aspirated and discarded. The beads were washed four times with 200 μL washes of wash buffer; each time the beads were resuspended, they were incubated a RT for 5 min. After the final wash, the majority of remaining wash was carefully aspirated from the tubes.


A set of four tubes was treated with T4 DNA polymerase. A cocktail was made by combining 10 μL of New England Biolab 10× Quick blunting buffer, 10 μL of 1 mM dNTPs from the same kit, 10 μL of water and 1 μL of T4 DNA polymerase. 20 μL was added to a set of four tubes and the reaction was incubated at 20° C. for 15 min.


For PCR amplification following capture, the non-T4 treated samples (captured only) were amplified with ACA2-25 (TGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA; SEQ ID NO: 67) in single primer reactions. The T4-treated samples were amplified with ACA2FL and CAC3FL primers (AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACGTCATGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATA CA (SEQ ID NO: 69) and CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCA C (SEQ ID NO: 74), respectively). The core reaction mixes contained, per 400 μL reaction, 120 L of water, 40 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer (NEB), 40 μL of 25 mM MgCl2, 80 μL of 10 μM single primer or 40 μL+40 μL of F and R primer, 20 μL of DMSO, 20 μL of 10 mM dNTPs and 4 μL of Taq polymerase. 80 μL aliquots were added to beads that had been resuspended in L of TEz (binding only) or 20 μL of T4 mix. The final volumes were 100 μL. These samples were amplified by PCR for 30 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec and 72° C.-60 sec. The gel analysis—5 μL of post-PCR material was loaded per lane—is shown in the results section. Qubit readings indicated that each PCR reaction had a concentration of ˜20-25 ng/μL.


For post-amplification analysis, a 500 μL (final volume) master mix of conventional PCR mix was made by combining 200 μL water, 50 μL 10× Taq buffer, 50 μL 25 mM MgCl2, 25 μL of DMSO, 25 μL of 10 mM dNTPs, 12.5 μL EvaGreen (Biotum) and 5 μL Taq polymerase (NEB). 42 μL aliquots were distributed into 8 tubes and 12 μL of F+R 10 μM PLP1 primer mixes (the assays are described in Example 5: Validation of PLP1 qPCR assays) were added. 9 μL of mix was distributed, each assay in 8 columns. A total of 6 samples, 1 μL of sample per well, was assayed. These samples were:

    • (a) Row 1: gDNA library starting material
    • (b) Row 2: Biotin oligo 1 capture material
    • (c) Row 3: Biotin oligo 1+PEG capture
    • (d) Row 4: Biotin oligo 10 capture material
    • (e) Row 5: Biotin oligo 10+PEG capture material
    • (f) Row 6: TEz NTC control


The T4 treated samples were not assayed because gel analysis showed that only aberrant material was treated by PCR amplification.


Results

The capture only libraries produced a smear that looked like the input genomic library, as expected. The samples left to right were (1) oligo 1, (2) oligo 1+PEG, (3) oligo 10, and (4) oligo 10+PEG. The T4-treated samples were contaminated with residual T4 polymerase (5-8). In particular embodiments, T4 polymerase is heat inactivated.


The Qubit measured yields of the four capture only libraries is shown below in Table 10.









TABLE 10





Qubit measured yields of the four capture only libraries



















C1 universal oligo
23.2
ng/μL



C1 + PEG
27.2
ng/μL



C10 universal oligo
24.8
ng/μL



C10 + PEG
25.6
ng/μL










For qPCR, all eight validated PLP1 assays (Example 5) were used in columns and samples in rows. The array of the samples was:

    • (a) Row 1: 1 μL of 25 ng/μL gDNA library
    • (b) Row 2: 1 μL of ˜25 ng/μL C1 capture sample
    • (c) Row 3: 1 μL of ˜25 ng/μL C1+P capture sample
    • (d) Row 4: 1 μL of ˜25 ng/μL C10 capture sample
    • (e) Row 5: 1 μL of ˜25 ng/μL C10+P capture sample
    • (f) Row 6: 1 μL TEz (NTC)


In this configuration, 1 sample per well, the data were meant to be more of a qualitative overview than a rigorous quantitative measurement. The data are shown in the tables below. The top table is raw Cq values. The next table is Cq values converted to absolute values based on the assumption that all samples and assays conform to the same two-fold standard curve. The bottom table shows the quotient of captured sample divided by gDNA library. This provides a sense of fold-enrichment following capture.









TABLE 11





Results of the eight PLP1 qPCR assays demonstrating successful


capture-induced enrichment of target sequences























Cq Values
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





gDNA lib
22
25
29
25
25
26
25
25


C1
14
11
11
11
9
15
23
22


C1 + P
18
15
18
14
13
18
29
26


C10
12
12
13
12
10
15
22
25


C10 + P
16
13
15
13
12
18
27
25


NTC
29
25
34
28
30
28
30
31





Cq Values
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





gDNA lib
33
3
0
4
3
2
3
2


C1
4782
56660
50773
43156
138885
2950
10
28


C1 + P
293
3196
407
6187
16082
450
0
1


C10
29864
34343
11961
28507
123383
2894
31
3


C10 + P
1234
11632
3976
10060
25772
413
1
2


NTC
0
3
0
0
0
1
0
0





cap/gDNA
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





C1
147
19303
330609
11735
48601
1720
3
11


C1 + P
9
1089
2649
1682
5628
262
0
1


C10
917
1170
77886
7752
43176
1688
10
1


C10 + P
38
3963
25890
2736
9019
241
0
1









Several conclusions were drawn from the data: (1) The capture worked. The average capture enrichment across on-target assays 1-5 for C1 was 82,000×. The average for C10 was 28,000×. Anywhere from hundreds to tens of thousands fold enrichment at assay sites was observed. This implies that ultramers work and that the basic probe design is effective. This meant that the basic stoichiometry of gDNA to probe to beads was correct; (2) The two biotin designs worked approximately the same; (3) PEG inhibits rather than enhanced capture efficiency; and (4) Significant “by-catch” at assay 6, which was 200 bp from target was observed. Less stray activity was seen for a region 1000 bp away.


In particular embodiments, it may be important to determine if enzymatic processing of the captured complex contributes to sensitivity (fold-enrichment) and specificity (degree of “by-catch”) in this scheme.


Example 7: PLP1 qPCR Assays in SYBR Space

Purpose:


In some cases it is useful for real-time conditions to exactly mimic non-real-time amplification conditions. In this example this meant to set up on ice and three stage, relatively slow PCR reactions. Alternatively, some assays do not require replication of a set amplification conditions; rather they are intended strictly to make quantitative measurements. For example, the PLP1 qPCR assays are preferably not used to produce fragments, but only to measure locus enrichment. In this type of situation, qPCR reaction set up at room temperature and fast cycling are advantages. In this experiment, the eight PLP1 assays in ABI 2×SYBR mix were tested. These are the same primer assays as described in the Example 5 (Validation of PLP1 qPCR assays).


Summary:


These data suggested that at least six of eight PLP1 qPCR assays could be used with SYBR green qPCR mix and conditions.


Methods:


PLP1 assay performance was measured against the female gDNA library (Example 3: hgDNA library from Promega female). Per 10 μL well combined 5 L ABI 2×SYBR master mix, 0.2 μL of 10 μM stock F+R primer, 1 μL of gDNA library (20 ng/μL) and 3.8 μL water (larger volume master mixes were made and aliquoted). Made triplicate no-template-control and triplicate gDNA library measurements across each assay. Cycled for 40 cycles on the Illumina Eco real-time PCR using standard 2 step PCR (15 sec at 95° C., 45 sec at 60° C.) with ROX passive reference dye normalization.


Results:


The called Cq values for each well are shown in Table 12 below. The NTC is very clean; the gDNA Cq's are variable, likely due to pipetting. The general theme is that Assay 1 and 7 were poor performers while the remaining assays worked reasonably well in SYBR space. In FIG. 11, the NTC traces (A) and +gDNA traces (B) were copied to provide a qualitative picture of assay performance.









TABLE 12







Called Cq values from rapid SYBR-green-based PLP1 assays

















Assay
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8






NTC
38
40
40
40
40
40
40
40




40
40
40
40
40
40
40
40




35
40
40
40
40
40
40
40



gDNA
35
25
25
24
27
22
32
26




35
25
25
24
26
23
32
27




32
24
22
22
23
21
29
24









Example 8: Measurement of PLP1 Exon2 Enrichment Before and after Enzymatic Processing of Complexes

Purpose:


In this example the enzymatic processing of the complex was tested directly for yield by measuring the “specific activity” of PLP1 exon2 DNA in pre- and post-processed capture complex. ultramers support excellent capture efficiency and the core capture protocol performed well.


Summary:


This experiment demonstrated that post-capture processing with T4-DNA polymerase dramatically improved the specificity of the capture reaction.


Background:


In Example 6 (Capture of PLP1 exon 2) the successful capture was described, however the post-capture processing step where T4 polymerase was not removed prior to PCR yielded an artifactual library. Here, the same basic experiment is repeated except that T4 was heat inactivated at 95° C. for 1 min prior to PCR.


Methods, Results, and Discussion:


In this experiment, four samples were generated which included two universal biotin capture probes in order to assess capture efficiency of complexes before and after enzyme processing. Each sample contained 50 μL of 20 ng/μL genomic DNA, 20 μL of 4× binding buffer, 1 μL of binding probes and either 9 μL of water for a final volume of 80 μL. Samples were melted at 95° C. for one minute and annealed by cooling the temperature in 1° C., 2 min increments to 60° C. (35 cycles of AutoX on our ABI2720 thermal cycler) followed by cooling to RT. A total of 10 μL of washed beads (equivalent to 1 μL of MyOne bead solution—streptavidin-coated C1—Invitrogen) were then added per sample and incubated for 20 min. The beads were pulled out with a magnet and the solution aspirated and discarded. The beads were washed four times with 200 μL washes of wash buffer; each time the beads were resuspended, they were incubated at RT for 5 min. After the final wash, the majority of remaining wash was carefully aspirated from the tubes, leaving beads coated with capture complex.


For T4 processing of two of the samples, we prepared 50 μL of enzymatic processing mix that contained 40 μL of water, 5 μL of 10× quick blunt buffer (New England Biolabs), 5 μL of 1 mM dNTPs and 0.5 μL of T4 DNA polymerase. Two aliquots of complex were suspended in 20 μL (each) of T4 mix and incubated at 20° C. for 15 min, 95° C. for 1 min, and cooled to RT. The “untreated” controls were suspended in 20 μL of the same buffer (40 μL of water, 5 μL of 10× quick blunt buffer (New England Biolabs), 5 μL of 1 mM dNTPs) that lacked T4 polymerase.


To measure specific activity, both the capture alone and capture+processing samples were amplified by 30 cycles of PCR. The DNA was then quantified and PLP1 assay signals measured in a specific and known amount of amplified DNA. In this example two amplification reactions were set-up. For capture alone, amplification was performed with ACA2-25 (TGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA; SEQ ID NO: 67) since these libraries are only amplifiable with this single primer. For enzyme-processed complexes, amplification was performed with ACA2FL and CAC3FL primers (AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACGTCATGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATA CA (SEQ ID NO: 69) and CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCA C (SEQ ID NO: 74), respectively). 100 μL of PCR mix contained 10 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer (all reagents NEB unless otherwise specified), 10 μL of 25 mM MgCl2, 20 μL of 10 μM single primer or 10 μL+10 μL of 10 μM dual primers, 20 μL of template (untreated control or T4 processed, beads and all), 5 μL of DMSO, 5 μL of 10 mM dNTPs and 1 μL of Taq DNA polymerase (all set up one ice prior to amplification). Samples were amplified for 30 cycles of PCR in a three step, 95° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec, 72° C.-60 sec, protocol followed by 72° C. for 2 min and rested at 10° C.


Following amplification, DNA yield was measured and the PCR amplified material examined by DNA gel electrophoresis. Qubit (InVitrogen) measured (DNA HS kit) yields are shown in Table 13 below. These data highlight a basic feature that dual primer amplification supports overall yields than single primer amplification.









TABLE 13







Qubit quantification of amplified DNA










Sample
Yield (ng/μL)







C1 biotin, unprocessed complex
23



C10 biotin, unprocessed complex
24



C1 biotin, T4-processed complex
38



C10 biotin, T4-processed complex
34










The gel image (2% agarose, 100 ng of material loaded) is shown in FIG. 12. Processing had two noticeable effects. First, it produced two faint bands of ˜250 bp (upper arrow) and ˜175 bp (lower arrow) in addition to an expected smear. The lower band was consistent with inadvertent cloning of probe (115 bp of adaptor+60 bp probe=175 bp). Second, processing reduced the overall size distribution of the sample. This was noteworthy since the 50 bp single adaptors were replaced by 115 bp full-length adaptors, which was expected to create an overall upward shift of 65 bp in processed material. The interpretation was that processing reduced the average insert size of the library significantly.


Two efforts were made to measure enrichment efficiency by qPCR. In the first, more qualitative effort, all eight PLP1 assays (described in detail in Example 5: Validation of PLP1 qPCR assays) were used to measure six samples:

    • 1. 25 ng/assay of starting gDNA library
    • 2. 0.25 ng/assay of untreated C1
    • 3. 0.25 ng/assay of untreated C10
    • 4. 0.25 ng/assay of T4 treated C1
    • 5. 0.25 ng/assay of T4 treated C10
    • 6. No template control


The Cq values from these single measurements are shown in Table 14 below. The gDNA and NTC controls did perform well (top and bottom, lightest shades) and were not evaluated further.









TABLE 14







Cq values of qualitative PLP1 assay analysis of enrichment efficiencies
















Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8


















gDNA
N/A
27
29
40
27
30
23
32


un-C1
12
8
8
9
5
11
24
29


un-C10
16
14
14
15
9
10
30
31


T4-C1
7
6
3
3
4
19
25
N/A


T4-C10
4
3
4
6
3
17
26
28


NTC
32
32
31
23
24
28
24
30









The T4-treated samples (darkest shading) had so much signal (Cq's less than 10) that quantitative analysis was not very informative. But at a qualitative level, two trends were clear in comparison to untreated capture complexes (middle shading). One was that on-target signal from assays 1-5 increases (lower Cq's) dramatically. The other was that off-target signal from Assay 6, which is 200 bp away from the target region, decreased significantly upon processing. While the data have some bumps and warts the central message was that processing greatly enhanced specificity of PLP1 exon2 signal.


To capture more quantitative aspects of this experiment, the untreated C10 capture amplicons were diluted 1000-fold and the processed C10 amplicons 15,000 fold prior to qPCR; this was done to bring Cq values into a measurable range. The starting gDNA library was then examined and these diluted samples in quadruplicate wells of the qPCR plate across two on-target assays (Assays 2 and 5) and two off-target assays (Assays 6 and 7). The Cq values of the quadruplicate wells were averaged and these values are shown in Table 15 below. Once again the gDNA signal was poor; the impact of poor signal on data interpretation was not terribly significant because the goal of these experiments was to compare PLP1 exon2 signal in unprocessed versus T4 polymerase treated capture complexes. The Cq values were converted to absolute values using a “universal” standard curve that assumes 2-fold amplification with every PCR cycle. The third segment of the table shows the adjustment for dilutions. The fourth segment, ratios of unprocessed and T4-treated to gDNA is not as useful; however, at the bottom of the table is the quantitative ratios of unprocessed versus T4-treated complex. In Example 6, it was observed that untreated capture enrichment of 82,000× for C1 and 28,000× for C10 (as in all these experiments, the gDNA denominator was derived from very low signal, so the fold range had a qualitative aspect to it), so a reasonable estimate was that capture alone produced a 50,000× enrichment of the 300 bp PLP1 exon2 region. Processing increased this enrichment another 50-fold (average of 83× and 24× from the Table 15), pushing enrichment to 2.5 million-fold and 10 million fold (3 billion bases per genome over 300 bp target). At the level of qPCR measurements, capture+processing therefore appeared to approach best-case scenarios in terms of enrichment. It was noteworthy that the off-target signal that was 200 bp removed from the target monitored by Assay 6, while greatly enriched by capture alone (the hitch-hiker, cross-hyb effect), dropped significantly with processing.









TABLE 15





Cq values of quantitative PLP1 assay


analysis of enrichment efficiencies







Raw Cq values













Cq
Assay 2
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7






gDNA
27
33
35
27



capture
15
12
17
32



cap + enz
13
11
24
31










Cq converted to absolute values













abs val
Assay 2
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7






gDNA
81
1
0
95



capture
253464
2538822
89450
3



cap + enz
1408479
4050620
506
4










Absolute values adjusted for dilutions of samples











abs val
Assay 2
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7





gDNA
81
1
0
95


capture
253465648
2538821701
89449912
2573


cap + enz
21127189405
60759299218
7584546
66931










Ratios of captured samples to gDNA











/gDNA
Assay 2
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7





capture
3126652
2394181716
239697693



cap + enz
260618748
57297762664
20324204










Ratios of unprocessed to processed sample













enz/cap
Assay 2
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7






cap + enz
83
24
0.08









This experiment addressed the specificity of capture+processing—the non-target qPCR signal. The specific activity per ng of amplified DNA—from PLP1 exon 2 was greatly enhanced by post-capture processing. This experiment did not address sensitivity, that is, the percent of capture complexes that are converted by enzyme. A quantitative understanding of both specificity and sensitivity of the present method may also be important in particular embodiments.


Example 9: Direct Measurement of Post-Capture Processing

Purpose:


In the Example 8, it was determined that post-capture processing achieved the desired aim of substantially increasing target capture specificity. The other critical parameter to be examined is sensitivity, i.e. the percentage of the initially captured complexes that are recovered in the final sequencing library. In this example, we demonstrated by direct measurement of sensitivity that enzymatic processing is effective for >10% of the initially captured sequences.


Summary:


The data from this experiment indicated that 10% of the on-target capture complexes were processed by T4 polymerase into post-capture sequencing library fragments.


Considerations:


By way of reference, a schematic illustration of post-capture processing is shown in FIG. 4. Here, the sensitivity of processing was measured in a three-step procedure, which is illustrated on the lower right of FIG. 13. First, single PLP1 capture probes were used in independent reactions to pull down/pull out PLP1 exon 2 specific genomic DNA fragments from the female gDNA library (Example 3: hgDNA library from Promega female). As there were four probes, four pull-downs were performed. The amount of captured material was measured using an adjacent PLP1 qPCR assay primer pair, as illustrated in FIG. 13(A). Following enzymatic processing of the complex, again by qPCR, the amount of processed complex was measured by using one PLP1 specific primer and one probe-specific primer, as show in FIG. 13(B). The ratio of the measurements in [B/A×100%] yielded an estimate of processing efficiency. Critical to the correct interpretation of the experimental results, the PCR products were extracted from real-time reactions and verified that amplicons of the expected length were produced by gel analysis FIG. 13(C). This was possible because both PCR reactions had discrete start and stop points. Pull-outs that yield interpretable data from A+B+C were used to determine processing efficiency.


Assays:


Individual probes needed to be matched to qPCR assays. Six combinations of probes matched to pre- and post-process qPCR assays were elected. These are shown below with probe sequences in italics, PLP1 exon2 specific primers shaded. The darker shaded primers are those that are paired with the CAC3 primer after processing. The expected product sizes of the PCR amplicons are also shown for each assay set:














SEQ ID




NO:
NAME
SEQUENCE







116
Probe 1 and assay 1;
agtgcccactatcccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag



qPCR assay 1 = 77 bp;
aggggcustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-character



CAC3⇄R1 =

custom-character
custom-character GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC




167 bp
AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





117
Probe 1 and assay 2;
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag



qPCR assay 2 = 83 bp;
aggggcustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-character



CAC3⇄R2 =

custom-character
custom-character GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC




224 bp:
AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





118
Assay 3 and probe 4;
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag



qPCR assay 3 = 81 bp;
aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac



F3⇄CAC3 = 187 bp:


tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT







gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc








tctctccatcctggagat
agagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





119
Assay 2 and probe 4;
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag



qPCR assay 2 = 83 bp;
aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac



F2⇄CAC3 = 216 bp:


tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT







gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc








tctctccatcctggagat
agagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





120
Probe 2 and assay 5;
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag



qPCR assay 5 = 95 bp;
aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac



CAC3⇄R5 =


tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC




209 bp:
AAGcustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-character





custom-character
custom-character GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACATGAAGCCCTCACTGGCACAGAAAAGCTAATTGAGACCTA






TTTCTCCAAAAACTACCAAG
ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga





121
Assay 4 and probe 3;
agtgcccactatctccgagcctgtgagcacagggcctggcag



qPCR assay 4 = 97 bp;
aggggtttgagtggcatgagctacctactggatgtgcctgac



F4⇄CAC3 = 204 bp:


tgtttccccttcttcttccccag
GCTTGTTAGAGTGCTGTGC





AAGATGTCTGGTAGGGGCCCCCTTTGCTTCCCTGGTGGCCAC






TGGATTGTGTTTCTTTGGGGT
GGCACTGTTCTGTGGCTGTGG





ACcustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-charactercustom-character





custom-character
custom-character ACTATGAGTATCTCATCAATGT






gtaagtacctgccctcccacacagacccatcttttttttccc






tctctccatcctggagatagagaactcttcagtaccttagta





actagcaggggactggggtgga









Methods

Probes.


In these assays the B10 universal oligo set of probes (24 Aug. 2012 Experiment 4—Capture of PLP1 exon 2) was chosen. To make individual capture probes, 1 L of universal oligo 10 (100 μM) was combined with 1 μL of 100 μM probe ultramer and 98 L of TEz+0.05% Tween20. This was further diluted 4 μL into 996 μL TEz+Tween to provide a 4 nM working solution.


Capture.


For capture 50 μL of 22 ng/μL gDNA library, 20 μL of 4× binding buffer, 1 μL of probe and 9 μL of water were combined. There were six independent capture reactions (two with probe #1, two with probe #4, one with probe #2 and one with probe #3). These were heated to 95° C. for 1 min then cooled in 35 “cycles” of −1° C. and 2 min to 60° C. as described earlier. Following annealing, 10 μL of washed beads (=1 μL of stock beads) was added and binding was incubated for 20 min at RT. Beads were then pulled aside and washed 4 times, 5 min each, with 200 μL aliquots of wash buffer. After the last wash, all remaining accessible fluid was aspirated from the beads.


Processing.


Beads were resuspended in 10 μL of quick blunt solution (200 μL=20 μL of 10× quick blunting buffer, 20 μL of 1 mM dNTP and 160 μL water). Each of the six aliquots of beads was split into two 5 μL aliquot. 5 μL of QB buffer without enzyme was added to one set of tubes (these are the capture-only aliquot). To the other 5 μL aliquots, 5 L of QB buffer containing 0.025 μL of T4 polymerase (this was made by combining 100 μL QB buffer with 0.5 μL of T4 polymerase and distributing 5 μL aliquots) was added. Both the capture only and the capture+processing tubes were incubated at 20° C. for 15 min, 98° C. for 1 min, cooled to RT and placed immediately on magnets. ˜10 μL of supernatant was pulled from the six pairs of capture-only and T4-processed complexes (now 12 tubes total). These supernatants were used directly in qPCR as described below.


qPCR.


For these assays, standard Taq reaction mix and 3 step thermal cycling were chosen. Twelve of 40 μL qPCR mix were constructed, each containing:

    • 14 μL of water
    • 4 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer
    • 4 μL of 25 mM MgCl2
    • 4 μL of a blend of F and R primer at 10 μM each
    • 8 μL of template (supernatant from above)
    • 2 μL of DMSO
    • 2 μL of 10 mM dNTPs
    • 1 μL of EvaGreen
    • 0.8 μL of ROX
    • 0.4 μL of Taq polymerase


Reactions were distributed in quads and cycled for 40 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 55° C.-30 sec, 72° C.-60 sec. Following PCR, reaction mix was pooled from each of the four wells of the quad and 5 μL was analyzed on 2% agarose gels.


Results

To interpret the experimental data, the agarose gels that are shown in FIG. 14 were examined. Under the cycling conditions used with the primers used (etc.) it was observed that assay sets 3, 5 and 6 yielded PCR products consistent with the assay amplicon (top gel) or the post-processed PLP1 to adaptor amplicons (bottom gel). The more successful assay sets corresponded to:

    • Probe 4 with assay 3
    • Probe 2 with assay 5
    • Probe 3 with assay 4


The qPCR Cq values are shown in Table 16 below. Assays 1 and 2 failed gel analysis. Successful assays are shown in assays 3, 5 and 4. To derive % processing values, Cq's were converted to absolute values (In “Excel speak”, Abs value=power(10, log 10(½)*Cq+10). The quotient of post-processed over capture only was then expressed as a percentage. This measurement assumed that the amplification efficiency of the all amplicons was the same and conforms to an idealized standard curve (probably reasonably accurate). Assuming this was correct, then approximately 10% of captured material appears to be processed.









TABLE 16







qPCR analysis of post-capture processing sensitivity














probe 1
probe 1
probe 4
probe 4
probe 2
probe 3



assay 1
assay 2
assay 3
assay 2
assay 5
assay 4





capture
23
21
25
21
25
26


post-process
16
23
29
22
28
29


% processed


7%

17%
10%









Example 10: Construction of Expanded Code Male and Female gDNA Libraries

Purpose:


Build set of 16 coded male and female gDNA libraries that will be used to test multiple capture parameters in a single MiSeq sequencing run.


Methods

Step 1: gDNA. Repaired gDNA was prepared.


Step 2:


All 16 possible adaptor codes were generated. These codes are four base structures in which the base positions at −4 and −3 (relative to the insert) are random bases and the base positions at −2 and −1 are sample codes. There are four “clusters” of sample codes. These are:

    • Cluster 1: AC, GA, CT, TG
    • Cluster 2: AA, GC, CG, TT
    • Cluster 3: AG, GT, CA, TC
    • Cluster 4: AT, GG, CC, TA


Clusters 2-4 were ordered as 100 μM oligos in plates. One set of plates had ligation strand and one set of plates had partner strands. The plate array was A1-H1, A2-H2, etc. To anneal adaptors in two sets of 96 well PCR plates, 70 μL/well of “annealing solution” containing 68 μL of TEz and 2 μL of 5M NaCl was added to 20 μL partner strand oligo and 10 L ligation strand oligo, covered with tape, and annealed 10 sec at 95° C., 5 min 65° C., and cooled to RT. Pooled sets of 16—random codes that have the same sample code—into sets of four. Red=set AA, GC, CG and TT. Purple=set AG, GT, CA and TC. Blue=set AT, GG, CC and TA (laid out in this order).


Step 3:


It is easiest to create 16 ligation for female DNA and 16 ligations for male DNA in which both types received the same set of 16 unique adaptor types. This will allow us to decide later which combinations of samples we want to create with maximum flexibility. To do this, End-repaired gDNA from the experiment was used. I will perform the requisite 32 ligation in 20 μL/rxn as follows:


Two gDNA cocktails were made, one female and one male, that contain:

    • 144 μL water
    • 32 μL 10× lig buffer
    • 48 μL 50% PEG8000
    • 64 μL gDNA


The cocktails were mixed and aliquoted into 16 tubes with 18 μL each. 2 L of adaptors and 0.5 μL HC T4 ligase were added and the resulting reactions were incubated at 22° C. for 60 min, 65° C. for 10 min, and cooled to RT. 80 μL TEz, then 120 μL Ampure beads were also added to the reactions, mixed and incubated 10 min at RT. The reactions were wash twice with 200 μL of 70% EtOH/water (v/v), air dried, and resuspended in 100 μL TEz.


Step 4:


qPCR. Make qPCR master mix containing:

    • 175 μL of water
    • 50 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer
    • 50 μL of 25 mM MgCl2
    • 100 μL of ACA2 primer (10 μM)
    • (50 μL of template—added later)
    • 25 μL of DMSO
    • 25 μL of 10 mM dNTPs
    • 12.5 μL of Eva green
    • 10 μL of ROX
    • 5 μL of Taq DNA polymerase


9 μL was distributed into the 48 wells of an Illumina Eco qPCR plate. Two serial dilutions of library calibration standard were made that are 10 pg/μL and 1 pg/μL. The remainder of the plate was loaded with libraries as shown in the tables below.









TABLE 17







Sample key for 48 well assay plate 1
















1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8





A
10 pg/μL
1 pg/μL
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6



STD
STD








B
10 pg/μL
1 pg/μL
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6



STD
STD








C
F7
F8
F9
F10
F11
F12
F13
F14


D
F7
F8
F9
F10
F11
F12
F13
F14


E
F15
F16
M1
M2
M3
M4
M5
M6


F
F15
F16
M1
M2
M3
M4
M5
M6









The second plate had the layout shown in Table 18 below.









TABLE 18







Sample key for 48 well assay plate 2
















1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8





A
100 pg/μL
10 pg/μL
1 pg/μL
NTC
F15
M1
M2
M3



STD
STD
STD







B
100 pg/μL
10 pg/μL
1 pg/μL
NTC
F15
M1
M2
M3



STD
STD
STD







C
M1
M2
M3
M4
M5
M6
M7
M8


D
M1
M2
M3
M4
M5
M6
M7
M8


E
M9
M10
M11
M12
M13
M14
M15
M16


F
M9
M10
M11
M12
M13
M14
M15
M16









Ligation efficiency was measured by the following cycling program:

    • 72° C.-2 min
    • 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec, and 72° C.-60 sec; 40 cycles


Results:



FIG. 49 shows the Cq values of STDs and samples (the average of duplicate measurements except (i) the experiment repeated on plate 2 and (ii) M1, M2 and M3 were measured in three sets of duplicates—average of the three measurements taken).


These were converted to arbitrary absolute values by the equation quantity=power (10, log 10(½)*Cq+8) in Excel. Values were then normalized to the known standards by multiplying abs values by 10/1583 (plate 1) or 10/1469 (plate 2). Genomes per μL was calculated by multiplying by ⅞ (to account for adaptor mass) and then dividing by 3 pg/genome. The ligation efficiency was calculated (20 ng/ligation & 1/100th measured=200 pg into ligation), and the calculated efficiency indicated that ˜5% conversion to library is about average. This was the same for libraries made without fill-in, which suggested that the fill-in reaction has rapid kinetics and can occur as the sample heats to 94° C. in the first cycle.


The goal of this experiment was to create ligation mixes containing gDNA library and to quantify genome equivalents per μL of ligation mix so that measured numbers of genomes can be amplified into microgram quantities of library material. FIG. 50 shows the genomes per μL for each library that was made. The goal of FIG. 51 was to convert designated samples (picked by random drawing) into 10 copy, 20 copy, 40 copy, 80 copy, etc. libraries for downstream capture tests. The table transposes the genomes per μL into μL per PCR reaction to achieve the indicated depth of coverage. The table assumes a 200 μL PCR per sample and 40 μL of template input. These experiments may be used as guides where actual libraries are generated and purified.


Example 11: Validation of 8 New Capture qPCR Assays

Purpose:


Validate the performance of eight new qPCR primer sets designed to follow capture efficiency of the expanded probe collection.


Summary:


All eight assays produced amplicons of the expected size when used to amplify human gDNA. Quantitative analysis of the chrX:154376051 region (4× in females, 2× in males) showed a surprisingly tight correlation between observed and expected copies.


Methods:


Eight segments for assay design that represent a sampling of the 49 probe target regions were chosen. To design assays, the DNA segment that is within 200 bp of the 5′ end of the probe was identified. The eight regions, as shown in Table 19 below, were chosen to be a more-or-less random selection of target regions. The 200 bp segments were submitted to PRIMER3 PCR primer picking in which we specified amplicons of 50-100 bp, primer Tm's of 65° C. (optimal) and primer lengths of 24 nt (optimal). Table 19 below shows the region and unique genomic attributes, the forward (F) and reverse (R) primer sequences, the expected amplicon length, and the actual amplicon within the context of the genomic sequence.









TABLE 19







Genomic capture targets, and primers for their interrogation













SEQ








ID








NO:
Assay
Region
Feature
Name
Sequence
Product





122
9
CYP2D6
4X in
CYP2D6_F
GGCTTCGACTGAACGTCTCCA
53 bp





males and








females
















123

CYP2D6_R
AGTGCTCCATGGCTGCTCAGTT
















124
10
chrX-
4X in
chrX-
GAACCAGAGGAACGCTGTGGTA
52 bp




154376051
females,
15_1_F
ACT






2X in








males
















125

chrX-
GACGTGTGCCTAGATGCGTTTTC




15_1_R

















126
11
chrX-
4X in
chrX-
TGGCTGAAAAGTCTCCTTGAAA
53 bp




154376051
females,
15_2_F
CTG






2X in








males
















127

chrX-
CTCAGTGGGTCTCCTTGAGAGAGGT




15_2_R

















128
12
chrX-
6X in
chrX-
CTTTCCTCCAGTCACAAGCCAT
78 bp




6929264
females,
69_F
CTA






5X in








males








(2 on








chr19, one








on chrX)
















129

chrX-
CATGCTGATAGAAAGTCCCCTGGTA




69_R

















130
13
KRAS
2X in
KRAS_r1_F
TTTTCACACAGCCAGGAGTCTT
66 bp




region 1
females

TTC






and males
















131

KRAS_r1_R
GGGAGATCCGACAATACAGATTGAA
















132
14
KRAS
2X in
KRAS_r2_F
CCTGTCTTGTCTTTGCTGATGT
73 bp




region 2
females

TTC






and males
















133

KRAS_r2_R
ACAAAACAGGCTCAGGACTTAGCAA
















134
15
MYC
2X in
MYC_r2_1_F
CAACGTTAGCTTCACCAACAGG
92 bp




region 2
females

AAC






and males
















135

MYC_r2_1_R
GCTGGTAGAAGTTCTCCTCCTCGTC
















136
16
MYC
2X in
MYC_r2_2_F
GTCTGCTCCACCTCCAGCTTGTA
93 bp




region 2
females








and males
















137

MYC_r2_2_R
GTTGAGAGGGTAGGGGAAGACCAC









The performance of each primer pair was investigated by performing 100 L PCR reactions that contained 200 ng (2 ng/μL) of female genomic DNA. The reaction mixes contained, per 100 μL, 50 μL water, 10 μL 10×STD Taq buffer, 10 μL 25 mM MgCl2, 10 μL of an F+R primer blend in which each primer was present at 10 μM, 10 μL of 20 ng/μL gDNA, 5 L of DMSO, 5 μL of 10 mM dNTPs, and 1 μL of Taq polymerase. Reactions were set up on ice. Amplifications were performed for 30 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec, and 72° C.-30 sec, followed by a 2 min incubation at 72° C. and hold at 10° C. Five μL of PCR product was examined on a 2% agarose gel.


PCR products were purified on Qiagen PCR purification columns by combining the remaining 95 μL of PCR product with 500 μL PB. The material was spun through the column at 6 KRPM for 30 sec and washed with 750 μL PE, spun at 13.2 KRPM. The products were eluted from the columns with 50 μL of EB and quantified by Qubit.


For qPCR analysis, the chrX-154376051 region (assays 10 & 11) was examined in more detail. The purified PCR products were diluted to 100 fg/μL, 10 fg/μL and 1 fg/μL. Genomic DNA was diluted to 10 ng/μL. Two microliters of either standards or gDNA was combined with 8 μL of PCR master mix per well of the 48-well Eco qPCR plate. Master mix contained, per 500 μL of final reaction volume (that accounts for the addition of template) 175 L of water, 50 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer, 50 μL of 25 mM MgCl2, 50 μL of F+R 10 μM primer blend, 25 μL of DMSO, 25 μL of 10 mM dNTPs, 12.5 μL EvaGreen, 10 μL of ROX and L of Taq polymerase. Thirty two μL of mix was distributed to 16 wells and 8 μL of templates were added. These were then distributed in quads to the qPCR plate. The plate layout is shown in Table 20 below. Conditions for Assay 10 are indicated in bold. Conditions for Assay 11 are indicated in underlined italics.









TABLE 20







Plate layout for qPCR interrogation of chrX-154376051 region
















1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8














A

100 fg PCR prod


10 fg PCR prod


1 fg PCR prod


NTC
















B



















C


100fgPCRprod




10fgPCRprod




1fgPCRprod




NTC

















D



















E

F-gDNA


M-gDNA



F-gDNA




M-gDNA




F













Results and Discussion:


Gel analysis of the PCR products amplified from genomic DNA showed that all eight PCR reactions produced unique products of the expected size (data not shown). The amplicons were sufficiently clean (no extra bands, no left-over primer) and were useful for generating standard curves for quantitative analysis. The amplicons were purified using Qiagen PCR spin columns and eluted products in 50 μL. The product yields were: Assay 9-18.4 ng/μL; Assay 10-26.1 ng/μL; Assay 11-13.9 ng/μL; Assay 12-26.6 ng/μL; Assay 13-7.9 ng/μL; Assay 14-19.2 ng/μL; Assay 15-23.1 ng/μL; and Assay 16—20.4 ng/μL.


Quantitative analysis was performed with assays 10 & 11 that correspond to a cryptic segmental duplication on chromosome X such that females have four copies and males have two copies.


The average Cq values are shown in Table 21 below. These were used to generate the standard curves shown. The two reactions were basically superimposable. Using these curves we calculated the absolute quantities in units of femtograms of both the STD curve wells and the genomic input wells. The data are shown in Table 21 below the standard curve data.









TABLE 21





Cq values of standard samples analyzed with assays 10 and 11





















STD Curve 10
13
17
20
31



STD Curve 11
13
16
20
33



F then M Samples
21
22
21
22










One point of this example was to emphasize the strength of quantitative molecular biology. In this experiment, 2 μL of STDs were added and sampled, meaning that the 1 fg/μL STD really had 2 fg in the qPCR reaction. This corresponds to 17,500 molecules of the 53 bp fragment of Assay 10. 20 ng of genomic DNA were put into the reaction. This corresponds to 6667 genomes worth of DNA. The genomic DNA was fragmented to an average size of 200 bp, meaning that only 75% of the target regions will remain intact. Hence, the gDNA had about 5000 “qPCR actionable” genome copies. Finally, in males the expected average of one copy of the duplicated X region per genome, and in females the expected average was two. The expected versus observed values, broken out by numbers of molecules observed, turned out to be as follows: Expected males=5000 copies; Observed males=3500 copies; Expected females=10000 copies; and Observed females=7000 copies.









TABLE 22





Expected vs. Observed Values




















STD curve 10
102.8004
9.421966
1.02996



F then M samples
0.447179
0.204926



STD curve 11
98.27451
10.35326
0.983644



F then M samples
0.388559
0.174757










Example 12: Further Post-Capture Processing Strategy

Purpose:


An alternative method to achieve post-capture processing (see FIG. 15) was developed.


Summary:


Post-capture processing steps performed with redesigned probes appeared to enhance the already robust capture by an additional 5-9-fold. Overall the test was very successful.


Background:


In other embodiments of the assay design, it was contemplated to use an exonuclease step at the 3′ end of clones prior to copying of the probe tail sequence that added a PCR priming site. The particular embodiments, it was further contemplated to shift from having the clone copy the probe to having the probe copy the clone. The reversal in polarity means that we use the 5′ end of the probe as both the pull-down sequence and the reverse PCR primer sequence. The 3′ end of the probe is left unmodified and can then copy the clone using DNA polymerase. Conceptually, there are some advantages to this approach. First, because there was a shift from a step that required both exonuclease activity and polymerization to a simple polymerization step, this step can be done in concert with PCR. Moreover, this step can be done at 72° C. with a thermostable polymerase enzyme, meaning potential secondary structures of single strand clones are less of an issue. Finally, the implication was that probes were shortened from 114 nt to 95 nt; and this provided a cost saving advantage.


Four well behaved qPCR assays (Example 11: Validation of eight new capture qPCR assays), assays 10, 14, 15 and 16 with probes that “point” at those assays were matched. While the probe and qPCR assays were within proximity to one another, their DNA sequences did not overlap with one another (See FIG. 16). The sequences of the probes and corresponding assays are shown in Tables 23 and 24 below.









TABLE 23







Genomic capture targets and primers for their interrogation













SEQ








ID








NO:
Assay
Region
Feature
Name
Sequence
Product





138
10
chrX-
4X in females, 2X
chrX-15_1_F
GAACCAGAGGAACGCT
52 bp




154376051
in males

GTGGTAACT






139



chrX-15_1_R
GACGTGTGCCTAGATG








CGTTTTC






140
14
KRAS
2X in females and
KRAS_r2_F
CCTGTCTTGTCTTTGC
73 bp




region 2
males

TGATGTTTC














141

KRAS_r2_R
ACAAAACAGGCTCAGGACTTAGCAA
















142
15
MYC
2X in females and
MYC_r2_1_F
CAACGTTAGCTTCACC
92 bp




region 2
males

AACAGGAAC














143

MYC_r2_1_R
GCTGGTAGAAGTTCTCCTCCTCGTC
















144
16
MYC
2X in females and
MYC_r2_2_F
GTCTGCTCCACCTCCA
93 bp




region 2
males

GCTTGTA














145

MYC_r2_2_R
GTTGAGAGGGTAGGGGAAGACCAC
















TABLE 24







Capture probe sequences and genomic targets










SEQ





ID





NO:
Assay
Region
60 mer probe sequence





146
10
chrX-
AGAATTCATTGCCAGCTATAAATC




154376051_2x_chrX: 154376979:
TGTGGAAACGCTGCCACACAATCT




region_1: 1011 nt: 929: 988: −
TAGCACACAAGA





147
14
KRAS_NM_033360_chr12: 25378485:
TAAATGACATAACAGTTATGATTT




region_2: 161 nt: −62: −3: +
TGCAGAAAACAGATCTGTATTTAT





TTCAGTGTTACT





148
15
MYC_NM_002467_chr8: 128750431:
AGGTTTCCGCACCAAGACCCCTTT




region_2: 773 nt: −62: −3: +
AACTCAAGACTGCCTCCCGCTTTG





TGTGCCCCGCTC





149
16
MYC_NM_002467_chr8: 128751122:
AGAGCAGAGAATCCGAGGACGGAG




region_2: 773 nt: 630: 689: −
AGAAGGCGCTGGAGTCTTGCGAGG





CGCAGGACTTGG









Methods:


A gDNA library was remade from samples F13-F16 (Example 10) by combining 20 μL of each ligation mix into 80 μL total and amplifying in 800 μL total. Beads were cleaned to 400 μL and pool concentration at 32 ng/μL was measured by Qubit.


Oligos from IDT, listed below, were resuspended to 100 μM. ultramers come as 4 nmol, so these were suspended in 40 μL TEzero. Four 2 μL aliquots of the four test probes were combined with 8 μL of 100 μM universal tail sequence (derived from the first 35 bases of the full length reverse primer #9) to give a 50 μM tube of duplex. This duplex was diluted 10 μL into 990 μL of TEzero+Tween to give 500 nM, and 10 into 990 again to get 5 nM.


Combined 40 μL of gDNA was combined with 15 μL of 4× bind and 5 L of capture duplex. The reaction mix was annealed and captured on 2 μLs of washed MyOne strep coated beads. The reaction was washed four times with wash buffer and aspirated wash buffer from bead pellet. To measure capture alone, one bead pellet was resuspended in 100 μL PCR mix that contained single PCR primer ACA2. To measure capture+processing, another bead pellet was resuspended in 100 μL of PCR mix that contained the full-length ACA2 forward primer (oligo #8) and full-length CAC3 reverse primer (oligo #9). The latter sample was incubated for 72° C. for 2 min. Both samples were amplified for 25 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec, and 72° C.-60 sec. After a hold at 72° C. for 2 min and cooling to RT, the PCR amplicons were purified on bead and resuspended in 50 μL of TEzero.


For qPCR, samples were assayed with assays 9-16 (assays 10, 14, 15, and 16 are targets), using EvaGreen as the reporter dye, ROX as the STD dye, and 3 step PCR of 94° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec and 72° C.-60 sec for 40 cycles. The original gDNA library was present at 2 ng/μL final concentration. The captured sample and capture+processed samples were present at 2 pg/L final concentration (diluted in TEzero+0.05% Tween20).


Results and Discussion:


PCR yields of the capture only was 27.8 ng/μL and of the capture+processing was 40.4 ng/μL. These robust yields indicated that amplification went to completion. The 2% agarose gel image shows the starting input library, the captured library and the capture+processing library (FIG. 17). If processing worked, the average insert size of the library should decrease, which it did. The fact that the bottom end of the library is more or less “a band” indicates that there may be some priming off of probe. Because the 3′ end of our probes are exposed in this format, it may be possible to eliminate residual, unbound probe with Exonuclease I, a ssDNA specific, 3′→5′ exonuclease.


An important metric in this experiment was qPCR measurement of capture sensitivity and specificity. qPCR data is shown in FIG. 52.


With respect to specificity, only those regions targeted (light gray highlight) exhibited significant enrichment. Moreover, the processed library had a significant increase in specific activity for all target regions relative to capture alone. These data indicated that this additional probe design embodiment could be used for efficient post-capture processing.


Example 13: Sequence Analysis of Post-Capture Processing Strategy

Purpose:


The purpose of this experiment was to assess the enrichment and coverage of target regions in sequencing libraries.


Summary:


The level of enrichment and focusing of target sequences was dramatically improved by coupling hybridization-based capture with enzymatic processing, compared to capture alone.


Background:


Prior experiments disclosed herein have demonstrated that post-capture processing increases the target content and specific activity of enrichment libraries as measured by qPCR. In this experiment, next generation DNA sequencing was used to compare the representation and distribution of target sequences in libraries generated by capture alone or by the alternative processing method.


Methods:


Two enrichment library pools were constructed from an equal mix of male and female human genomic DNA using a set of 49 capture probes that target sites within specific genes (KRAS, MYC, PLP1, CYP2D6 and AMY1) and duplicated regions on the X chromosome. Probe sequences are shown in Table 25 below









TABLE 25







qPCR analysis of capture sensitivity and specificity










SEQ





ID

Probe



NO:
No.
Name
Probe Sequence













150
1
CYP2D6_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAAGCACCTAGCCC





CATTCCTGCTGAGCAGGAGGTGGCAGGTACCCCAGACTGGGAGGTAA





151
2
CYP2D6_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAGTCGGTGGGGCC





AGGATGAGGCCCAGTCTGTTCACACATGGCTGCTGCCTCTCAGCTCT





152
3
AMY1_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACACCTGAGTAGCAT





CATTGTAGTTCTCGATATCTCCACTTCCAGTTTTACATTTACCATCA





153
4
chrX_15_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCCTGGCCCTCAGC





CAGTACAGAAAGTCATTTGTCAAGGCCTTCAGTTGGCAGACGTGCTC





154
5
chrX_15_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAGAATTCATTGCC





AGCTATAAATCTGTGGAAACGCTGCCACACAATCTTAGCACACAAGA





155
6
chrX_477_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGACTTCAAAGAAA





TTACAAGTTGACATCTTGGACTCTACCCCTCGTACTTTATCTCCTAT





156
7
chrX_477_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTCTCTTTGGGGTC





AAGAAAGAATCCCTAGTGGATTTGGGATTCTAGAGGAGGTGTTATAA





157
8
chrX_478_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTGCGATACCATGC





TGAAGATGAGCTAACCCAACCAGCCAAGCAGGCAGGGCTGCGAAGGA





158
9
chrX_478_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGGGGTAGGTGGAA





AACCCAAGTAATGTGATTTTGTAACATCCACTGCTGCATTTGTTTGC





159
10
chrX_69_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTACTTCCCTCCA





GTTTTGTTGCTTGCAAAACAACAGAATCTTCTCTCCATGAAATCATG





160
11
chrX_69_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCAGGGGTATCTAT





TATCCCCATTTTCTCACAAAGGAAACCAAGATAAAAGGTTTAAATGG





161
12
PLP1_ex1_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGAAATTCTCTTGT





GAATTCCTGTGTCCTCTTGAATCTTCAATGCTAAAGTTTTTGAAACT





162
13
PLP1_ex2_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGGGTTTGAGTGGC





ATGAGCTACCTACTGGATGTGCCTGACTGTTTCCCCTTCTTCTTCCC





163
14
PLP1_ex2_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCTATCTCCAGGAT





GGAGAGAGGGAAAAAAAAGATGGGTCTGTGTGGGAGGGCAGGTACTT





164
15
PLP1_ex3_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGAAAGAAGCCAGG





TCTTCAATTAATAAGATTCCCTGGTCTCGTTTGTCTACCTGTTAATG





165
16
PLP1_ex3_M
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCAGACTCGCGCCC





AATTTTCCCCCACCCCTTGTTATTGCCACAAAATCCTGAGGATGATC





166
17
PLP1_ex3_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTCTTTCTTCTTCC





TTTATGGGGCCCTCCTGCTGGCTGAGGGCTTCTACACCACCGGCGCA





167
18
PLP1_ex4_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGTTTGTGTTTCTA





CATCTGCAGGCTGATGCTGATTTCTAACCACCCCATGTCAATCATTT





168
19
PLP1_ex4_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAACCAAATATATA





GTGCTTCCATAGTGGGTAGGAGAGCCAAAGCACCCGTACCCTAACTC





169
20
PLP1_ex5_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAGTCTCCATGTGG





CCCCGTAACTCCATAAAGCTTACCCTGCTTGCTTTTTGTGTCTTACT





170
21
PLP4_ex5_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCCATGGGTGTAAT





TTGTATGGTATTAGCTACTCCCTTGTAAAATAACCCAAATAACCCAC





171
22
PLP1_ex6_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTTACAGTGGAGC





ATATTACTGCTGTTGCAAGAAACAGTTCTTCCTCTTTCATTTTCCTG





172
23
PLP1_ex6_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACATAGCTGTACCCA





CACTATCTCAGGCCTATTTACTTGCCAAGATCATTCAAAGTCAACTC





173
24
PLP1_ex7_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGATTTGAGGAGGG





AGTGCTTTCTTTTCTACTCTCATTCACATTCTCTCTTCTGTTCCCTA





174
25
PLP1_ex7_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCAGCATTGTAGGC





TGTGTGGTTAGAGCCTCGCTATTAGAGAAAGGGGGATTTCTACGGGG





175
26
KRAS_ex1_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTGTTACCTTTAAA





AGACATCTGCTTTCTGCCAAAATTAATGTGCTGAACTTAAACTTACC





176
27
KRAS_ex1_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTCCCAGTAAATT





ACTCTTACCAATGCAACAGACTTTAAAGAAGTTGTGTTTTACAATGC





177
28
KRAS_ex2_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTAAATGACATAAC





AGTTATGATTTTGCAGAAAACAGATCTGTATTTATTTCAGTGTTACT





178
29
KRAS_ex2_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGACAGGTTTTGAA





AGATATTTGTGTTACTAATGACTGTGCTATAACTTTTTTTTCTTTCC





179
30
KRA S_ex3_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACACTCAAAAAATAA





AAACTATAATTACTCCTTAATGTCAGCTTATTATATTCAATTTAAAC





180
31
KRAS_ex3_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAACACCTTTTTTG





AAGTAAAAGGTGCACTGTAATAATCCAGACTGTGTTTCTCCCTTCTC





181
32
KRAS_ex4_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGAAACCTTTATCT





GTATCAAAGAATGGTCCTGCACCAGTAATATGCATATTAAAACAAGA





182
33
KRAS_ex4_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGTGTATTAACCTT





ATGTGTGACATGTTCTAATATAGTCACATTTTCATTATTTTTATTAT





183
34
MYC_r1_F1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCCCCAGCCAGCGG





TCCGCAACCCTTGCCGCATCCACGAAACTTTGCCCATAGCAGCGGGC





184
35
MYC_r1_R1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCGACTCATCTCAG





CATTAAAGTGATAAAAAAATAAATTAAAAGGCAAGTGGACTTCGGTG





185
36
MYC_r2_F1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACCTGTGGCGCGCAC





TGCGCGCTGCGCCAGGTTTCCGCACCAAGACCCCTTTAACTCAAGAC





186
37
MYC_r2_F2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTCTACTGCGACG





AGGAGGAGAACTTCTACCAGCAGCAGCAGCAGAGCGAGCTGCAGCCC





187
38
MYC_r2_F3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACACCGAGCTGCTGG





GAGGAGACATGGTGAACCAGAGTTTCATCTGCGACCCGGACGACGAG





188
39
MYC_r2_F4
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGCCGCCGCCTCAG





AGTGCATCGACCCCTCGGTGGTCTTCCCCTACCCTCTCAACGACAGC





189
40
MYC_r2_R1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGGCGGCTAGGGGA





CAGGGGCGGGGTGGGCAGCAGCTCGAATTTCTTCCAGATATCCTCGC





190
41
MYC_r2_R2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAGACGAGCTTGGC





GGCGGCCGAGAAGCCGCTCCACATACAGTCCTGGATGATGATGTTTT





191
42
MYC_r2_R3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAGGAGAGCAGAGA





ATCCGAGGACGGAGAGAAGGCGCTGGAGTCTTGCGAGGCGCAGGACT





192
43
MYC_r2_R4
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTAAGAGTGGCCCG





TTAAATAAGCTGCCAATGAAAATGGGAAAGGTATCCAGCCGCCCACT





193
44
MYC_r3_F1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTTGTATTTGTACA





GCATTAATCTGGTAATTGATTATTTTAATGTAACCTTGCTAAAGGAG





194
45
MYC_r3_F2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGAGGCCACAGCAA





ACCTCCTCACAGCCCACTGGTCCTCAAGAGGTGCCACGTCTCCACAC





195
46
MYC_r3_F3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACAGAGGAGGAACGA





GCTAAAACGGAGCTTTTTTGCCCTGCGTGACCAGATCCCGGAGTTGG





196
47
MYC_r3_R1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACTCCAACTTGACCC





TCTTGGCAGCAGGATAGTCCTTCCGAGTGGAGGGAGGCGCTGCGTAG





197
48
MYC_r3_R2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGCTTGGACGGACA





GGATGTATGCTGTGGCTTTTTTAAGGATAACTACCTTGGGGGCCTTT





198
49
MYC_r3_R3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACGCATTTGATCATG





CATTTGAAACAAGTTCATAGGTGATTGCTCAGGACATTTCTGTTAGA









The first library pool was generated as described for the ‘capture plus processing’ library in Example 12. The second pool was generated as described for the ‘capture only’ library in Example 12 except for the following modification. After capture, a second round of PCR was performed to convert single primer, ACA2-amplified libraries into dual primer, heterologous end libraries suitable for Illumina sequencing. To do this, libraries were diluted and re-amplified with the following primers: primer #55 AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACGTCATGCAGGACCAGAG (SEQ ID NO: 199) and primer #56 CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGAGAATTCGAATAC A (SEQ ID NO: 200).


The 100 μL reaction mix contained 40 ng of library, 10 μL of 10×STD Taq buffer, 10 μL of 25 mM MgCl2, 10 μL of 55 and 10 μL of 56 primer that were both at 10 uM, 5 μL of DMSO, 5 μL of dNTP and 1 μL of Taq DNA polymerase. The samples were amplified for 2 cycles of 94° C.-30 sec, 50° C.-30 sec, 52.5° C.-30 sec, 55° C.-30 sec, 57.5° C.-30 sec, 60° C.-30 sec, 72° C.-1 min. They were then amplified for 8 cycles of 94 C-30 sec, 60 C-30 sec and 72 C-60 sec followed by 72° C. for 2 min. PCR mixes were purified with beads and resuspended in 50 μL each.


Results and Discussion:


Both pools were analyzed using an Illumina MiSeq Personal Sequencer. The 50 nucleotide sequence reads from each library pool were trimmed to remove 4 base barcode sequences and mapped to the human genome reference sequence (version hg19) using the Bowtie sequence alignment program. Approximately 80% of reads in both libraries aligned unambiguously to the reference sequence. Further characterization of aligned reads revealed that coupling hybridization-based capture with enzymatic processing resulted in a 979,592-fold enrichment of the 4.9 kilobase target region relative to the input genomic DNA. This represented a 3-fold improvement in library content when compared to the unprocessed, ‘capture only’ approach. Overall, nearly 4 out of 5 sequences obtained by this alternative processing method mapped to genomic sites that were specifically targeted by capture probes.


A summary of alignment statistics for each library pool are shown in FIG. 53.


Reads from each library pool were also displayed in the UCSC Genome Browser to assess local sequence coverage and distribution around target sites. A close-up view of two segments of the X chromosome shows that processed libraries produced sequence coverage that was more highly concentrated within targeted sites than ‘capture only’ libraries did (FIG. 18). Moreover, the sequences mapping to target regions were more uniformly distributed in the processed libraries than the unprocessed controls. Taken together, these data indicated that the alternative processing method dramatically improved the quantity and quality of target sequences present in enriched libraries.


Example 14: Bioinformatics

Overview:


Traditional Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) analysis is “vertical.” The unique design of the inventive molecules contemplated herein enables a “horizontal” approach that will revolutionize the approach to clinical resequencing.


“Vertical” as used herein, with regard to sequence alignments, refers to approaches exemplified by FIG. 19. Previous approaches to informatics analysis involve a first step in which short reads are aligned to a reference genome. Following alignment, overlapping reads are analyzed for base changes that may be indicative of a SNV (single nucleotide variant). The approach was nick-named here as “vertical” because it relies on alignments that are often depicted as vertical stacks of reads. Various programs make allowances for SNVs and Indels (insertions/deletions), but the core approach is alignment-recognition-based.


In contrast, the paired-end read data obtained by the methods contemplated herein will have DNA tagged sequence information in read 1 and probe ID information in read 2. The first step in data analysis is to match reads to probes. Step two is analyzing the sequence information connected “horizontally” to each probe. See, e.g., FIG. 20.


At sufficient read depth, horizontal, probe-based sequence association does not rely on alignment. Rather, reads can be assembled into contigs de novo. The advantage of the method is that it is extremely robust to insertions/deletions and multiple sequence changes in a short stretch of sequence, both situations where conventional, alignment-based methods struggle and have the most difficulty detecting. Moreover, the combination of horizontal association with probes and tagging facilitates more accurate hypothesis generation (i.e., determination if an observed sequence variant is likely to be true or false).


CNV and Structural Variation I:


In large scale copy number variation (CNV) analyses, the method comprises determination of unique read numbers associated with captured sequence regions. The vast majority of observed CNV is “micro-CNV” that involves base insertions and deletions that are on the order of 2-100 bp in length. Vertical alignment methods struggle with micro insertions/deletions (indel) because they require relaxation of alignment stringency that promotes large numbers of false-positive hypotheses. Horizontal methods and de novo contig assembly require no such relaxation of alignment parameters and they demand that structural variation is accounted for.


Consider the simple case of a small insertion within one allele of an exon, as exemplified in FIG. 21. In this example, horizontal alignment “forces” reads to be associated with probe 1 and probe 2. Assembly will generate two contigs, one with a wild-type exon structure and one with an insertion structure. Two principles emerge from this analysis: 1) Overlapping reads from adjacent probes will support or refute the hypothesis of an indel-containing allele of the captured exon; and 2) micro-CNV alleles outside of capture probes are readily detectable by horizontal methodologies.


CNV and Structural Variation II:


Validation of CNV often involves vertical alignment methods. In these studies, typically perfect alignments to a reference sequence are demanded. Such methods are vulnerable to SNVs (such as common SNPs) where reads crossing SNVs that differ from the reference will be discarded. The net result will be chronic underestimation of copy number. The horizontal methods possible with the present invention methods should be used going forward.


Horizontal hypothesis testing of SNVs I:


Vertical, alignment-based methods for SNV detection are difficult to analyze. Homozygous variant alleles involving a single base are fairly straightforward to identify, but these changes are rare. More commonly, SNVs are heterozygous, and variants may occur at several contiguous or closely spaced positions (error prone repair tends to lay down tracks where several bases are non-consensus). The heterozygous SNV hypotheses run the spectrum from true, high coverage detection where (strictly as an hypothetical example) 49 reads possess a SNV and 47 reads possess the wild-type, reference base. Calls become much more speculative when read depth thins and the numbers of SNV versus WT reads deviate significantly from 50/50 (e.g., 10 total reads where 8 are WT and 2 are variant). Hypotheses nominated for orthogonal validation are invariably subject to an arbitrary cut-off.


In particular embodiments, where horizontal probe-based association is combined with tags, far greater granularity in SNV hypotheses is achieved. SNVs that reside on a single tag (tag=code+end-point), especially in cases where reads within the same tag are WT, are disregarded. See, e.g., FIG. 22.


Horizontal hypothesis testing of SNVs II:


SNV hypotheses that arise on two different tags, even if the read start sites are identical (A), or that arise on different reads that horizontally associate with the same probe (B), or that arise from different probe associations at the same exon (C) are necessarily hypotheses that must be seriously considered. See, e.g., FIG. 23.


Example 15: Molecular Annotation

Overview:


This example describes the interplay between “molecular annotation” of sequencing libraries (FIG. 24) and the informatics used in subsequent steps to evaluate the resulting sequencing information. The reverse read from a probe has utility. Reverse read 2, which determines the DNA sequence of the probe region, has significant utility in all downstream analysis considerations. For example, utility can be found in variant calling and the output from this in copy number determination. These two aspects of data analysis are described below.


Read 2 Probe Sequence:


A probe set is a unique and known collection of sequences, which can include one or two probes or even tens of thousands of probes. This means that read_2 can be used to identify any and all of the probes within an experiment. This of course assumes that read 2 is of sufficient length and that probes are designed such that the region interrogated by read_2 constitutes a unique identifier. Table 26 describes a collection of 192 probes and the 10 nt read_2 sequence that serves as a unique identifier for each probe. Note that two probes (CYP2C19_r5_F and CYP2C9r5F) naturally share identical 10 nt 5′ DNA sequences, and a 2 nt code of “AG” or “CT” was added to distinguish between them.









TABLE 26







Collection of 192 probes













SEQ

SEQ




ID

ID


Name
Sequence
NO:
10 nt read_2
NO:





CYP2D6_F
AAGCACCTAGCCCCATTCCTGCT
201
AAGCACCTAG
393



GAGCAGGAGGTGGCAGGTACCCC






AGACTGGGAGGTAA








CYP2D6_R
AGTCGGTGGGGCCAGGATGAGGC
202
AGTCGGTGGG
394



CCAGTCTGTTCACACATGGCTGC






TGCCTCTCAGCTCT








AMY1_F
ACCTGAGTAGCATCATTGTAGTT
203
ACCTGAGTAG
395



CTCGATATCTCCACTTCCAGTTT






TACATTTACCATCA








chrX_15_F
CCTGGCCCTCAGCCAGTACAGAA
204
CCTGGCCCTC
396



AGTCATTTGTCAAGGCCTTCAGT






TGGCAGACGTGCTC








chrX_15_R
AGAATTCATTGCCAGCTATAAAT
205
AGAATTCATT
397



CTGTGGAAACGCTGCCACACAAT






CTTAGCACACAAGA








chrX_477_F
GACTTCAAAGAAATTACAAGTTG
206
GACTTCAAAG
398



ACATCTTGGACTCTACCCCTCGT






ACTTTATCTCCTAT








chrX_477_R
TCTCTTTGGGGTCAAGAAAGAAT
207
TCTCTTTGGG
399



CCCTAGTGGATTTGGGATTCTAG






AGGAGGTGTTATAA








chrX_478_F
TGCGATACCATGCTGAAGATGAG
208
TGCGATACCA
400



CTAACCCAACCAGCCAAGCAGGC






AGGGCTGCGAAGGA








chrX_478_R
GGGGTAGGTGGAAAACCCAAGTA
209
GGGGTAGGTG
401



ATGTGATTTTGTAACATCCACTG






CTGCATTTGTTTGC








chrX_69_F
TTACTTCCCTCCAGTTTTGTTGC
210
TTACTTCCCT
402



TTGCAAAACAACAGAATCTTCTC






TCCATGAAATCATG








chrX_69_R
CAGGGGTATCTATTATCCCCATT
211
CAGGGGTATC
403



TTCTCACAAAGGAAACCAAGATA






AAAGGTTTAAATGG








PLP1_ex1_F
GAAATTCTCTTGTGAATTCCTGT
212
GAAATTCTCT
404



GTCCTCTTGAATCTTCAATGCTA






AAGTTTTTGAAACT








PLP1_ex2_F
GGGTTTGAGTGGCATGAGCTACC
213
GGGTTTGAGT
405



TACTGGATGTGCCTGACTGTTTC






CCCTTCTTCTTCCC








PLP1_ex2_R
CTATCTCCAGGATGGAGAGAGGG
214
CTATCTCCAG
406



AAAAAAAAGATGGGTCTGTGTGG






GAGGGCAGGTACTT








PLP1_ex3_F
GAAAGAAGCCAGGTCTTCAATTA
215
GAAAGAAGCC
407



ATAAGATTCCCTGGTCTCGTTTG






TCTACCTGTTAATG








PLP1_ex3_M
CAGACTCGCGCCCAATTTTCCCC
216
CAGACTCGCG
408



CACCCCTTGTTATTGCCACAAAA






TCCTGAGGATGATC








PLP1_ex3_R
TCTTTCTTCTTCCTTTATGGGGC
217
TCTTTCTTCT
409



CCTCCTGCTGGCTGAGGGCTTCT






ACACCACCGGCGCA








PLP1_ex4_F
GTTTGTGTTTCTACATCTGCAGG
218
GTTTGTGTTT
410



CTGATGCTGATTTCTAACCACCC






CATGTCAATCATTT








PLP1_ex4_R
AACCAAATATATAGTGCTTCCAT
219
AACCAAATAT
411



AGTGGGTAGGAGAGCCAAAGCAC






CCGTACCCTAACTC








PLP1_ex5_F
AGTCTCCATGTGGCCCCGTAACT
220
AGTCTCCATG
412



CCATAAAGCTTACCCTGCTTGCT






TTTTGTGTCTTACT








PLP1_ex5_R
CCATGGGTGTAATTTGTATGGTA
221
CCATGGGTGT
413



TTAGCTACTCCCTTGTAAAATAA






CCCAAATAACCCAC








PLP1_ex6_F
TTTACAGTGGAGCATATTACTGC
222
TTTACAGTGG
414



TGTTGCAAGAAACAGTTCTTCCT






CTTTCATTTTCCTG








PLP1_ex6_R
ATAGCTGTACCCACACTATCTCA
223
ATAGCTGTAC
415



GGCCTATTTACTTGCCAAGATCA






TTCAAAGTCAACTC








PLP1_ex7_F
GATTTGAGGAGGGAGTGCTTTCT
224
GATTTGAGGA
416



TTTCTACTCTCATTCACATTCTC






TCTTCTGTTCCCTA








PLP1_ex7_R
CAGCATTGTAGGCTGTGTGGTTA
225
CAGCATTGTA
417



GAGCCTCGCTATTAGAGAAAGGG






GGATTTCTACGGGG








KRAS_ex1_F
TGTTACCTTTAAAAGACATCTGC
226
TGTTACCTTT
418



TTTCTGCCAAAATTAATGTGCTG






AACTTAAACTTACC








KRAS_ex1_R
TTCCCAGTAAATTACTCTTACCA
227
TTCCCAGTAA
419



ATGCAACAGACTTTAAAGAAGTT






GTGTTTTACAATGC








KRAS_ex2_F
TAAATGACATAACAGTTATGATT
228
TAAATGACAT
420



TTGCAGAAAACAGATCTGTATTT






ATTTCAGTGTTACT








KRAS_ex2_R
GACAGGTTTTGAAAGATATTTGT
229
GACAGGTTTT
421



GTTACTAATGACTGTGCTATAAC






TTTTTTTTCTTTCC








KRAS_ex3_F
ACTCAAAAAATAAAAACTATAAT
230
ACTCAAAAAA
422



TACTCCTTAATGTCAGCTTATTA






TATTCAATTTAAAC








KRAS_ex3_R
AACACCTTTTTTGAAGTAAAAGG
231
AACACCTTTT
423



TGCACTGTAATAATCCAGACTGT






GTTTCTCCCTTCTC








KRAS_ex4_F
GAAACCTTTATCTGTATCAAAGA
232
GAAACCTTTA
424



ATGGTCCTGCACCAGTAATATGC






ATATTAAAACAAGA








KRAS_ex4_R
GTGTATTAACCTTATGTGTGACA
233
GTGTATTAAC
425



TGTTCTAATATAGTCACATTTTC






ATTATTTTTATTAT








MYC_r1_F1
CCCCAGCCAGCGGTCCGCAACCC
234
CCCCAGCCAG
426



TTGCCGCATCCACGAAACTTTGC






CCATAGCAGCGGGC








MYC_r1_R1
CGACTCATCTCAGCATTAAAGTG
235
CGACTCATCT
427



ATAAAAAAATAAATTAAAAGGCA






AGTGGACTTCGGTG








MYC_r2_F1
CTGTGGCGCGCACTGCGCGCTGC
236
CTGTGGCGCG
428



GCCAGGTTTCCGCACCAAGACCC






CTTTAACTCAAGAC








MYC_r2_F2
TTCTACTGCGACGAGGAGGAGAA
237
TTCTACTGCG
429



CTTCTACCAGCAGCAGCAGCAGA






GCGAGCTGCAGCCC








MYC_r2_F3
ACCGAGCTGCTGGGAGGAGACAT
238
ACCGAGCTGC
430



GGTGAACCAGAGTTTCATCTGCG






ACCCGGACGACGAG








MYC_r2_F4
GCCGCCGCCTCAGAGTGCATCGA
239
GCCGCCGCCT
431



CCCCTCGGTGGTCTTCCCCTACC






CTCTCAACGACAGC








MYC_r2_R1
GGCGGCTAGGGGACAGGGGCGGG
240
GGCGGCTAGG
432



GTGGGCAGCAGCTCGAATTTCTT






CCAGATATCCTCGC








MYC_r2_R2
AGACGAGCTTGGCGGCGGCCGAG
241
AGACGAGCTT
433



AAGCCGCTCCACATACAGTCCTG






GATGATGATGTTTT








MYC_r2_R3
AGGAGAGCAGAGAATCCGAGGAC
242
AGGAGAGCAG
434



GGAGAGAAGGCGCTGGAGTCTTG






CGAGGCGCAGGACT








MYC_r2_R4
TAAGAGTGGCCCGTTAAATAAGC
243
TAAGAGTGGC
435



TGCCAATGAAAATGGGAAAGGTA






TCCAGCCGCCCACT








MYC_r3_F1
TTGTATTTGTACAGCATTAATCT
244
TTGTATTTGT
436



GGTAATTGATTATTTTAATGTAA






CCTTGCTAAAGGAG








MYC_r3_F2
GAGGCCACAGCAAACCTCCTCAC
245
GAGGCCACAG
437



AGCCCACTGGTCCTCAAGAGGTG






CCACGTCTCCACAC








MYC_r3_F3
AGAGGAGGAACGAGCTAAAACGG
246
AGAGGAGGAA
438



AGCTTTTTTGCCCTGCGTGACCA






GATCCCGGAGTTGG








MYC_r3_R1
TCCAACTTGACCCTCTTGGCAGC
247
TCCAACTTGA
439



AGGATAGTCCTTCCGAGTGGAGG






GAGGCGCTGCGTAG








MYC_r3_R2
GCTTGGACGGACAGGATGTATGC
248
GCTTGGACGG
440



TGTGGCTTTTTTAAGGATAACTA






CCTTGGGGGCCTTT








MYC_r3_R3
GCATTTGATCATGCATTTGAAAC
249
GCATTTGATC
441



AAGTTCATAGGTGATTGCTCAGG






ACATTTCTGTTAGA








AMY1A_r_9
CATCATTGTTGAAAACAATGAAT
250
CATCATTGTT
442



CCTCTGTTTCCTCTCCCAAAAGC






CACTTGGTTGCTCC








AMY1A_r-10
TTTATCTCCAGAAATGACATCAC
251
TTTATCTCCA
443



AGTATGTGCCAGCAGGAAGACCA






GTTTGCAAAGTTAA








AMY1A_r_8
CTATTAGAGGACATGTCTAAATA
252
CTATTAGAGG
444



CATATTCTCACCTTATTTGGCGC






CATCGATGTTCACA








AR_r1_F
TCTGAGCAAGAGAAGGGGAGGCG
253
TCTGAGCAAG
445



GGGTAAGGGAAGTAGGTGGAAGA






TTCAGCCAAGCTCA








AR_r1_R
CCAGAACACAGAGTGACTCTGCC
254
CCAGAACACA
446



CTGGGCCGAAAGGCGACATTTCT






GGAAGGAAAAACTT








AR_r2_F
CTTCACTTGCCTATTTCTGCCAT
255
CTTCACTTGC
447



TCAGTGACATGTGTTGCATTGGT






TTTTTGTGTCTTTC








AR_r2_R
GTGTCTCTCTCTGGAAGGTAAAG
256
GTGTCTCTCT
448



GAGAAAGGGAAAGAGAAGTGCAT






GTGCAAGACCCTTT








AR_r3_F
CCGAAGAAAGAGACTCTGGAAAC
257
CCGAAGAAAG
449



TCATTATCAGGTCTATCAACTCT






TGTATTTGTTCTCC








AR_r3_R
ACTAGAAAATGAGGGAGAAGGGG
258
ACTAGAAAAT
450



GAGAGAGGAAGGAGGAGGAAGAG






AAAGAAAAGTATCT








AR_r4_F
GTAGTTGCATTGTGTGTTTTTGA
259
GTAGTTGCAT
451



CCACTGATGATAAATTCAAGTCT






CTCTTCCTTCCCAA








AR_r4_R
CATAGGAGCGTTCACTAAATATG
260
CATAGGAGCG
452



ATCCCCCTTATCTCATGCTCCCA






CTTCCCTTTTCCTT








AR_r5_F
CTCAGACTTAGCTCAACCCGTCA
261
CTCAGACTTA
453



GTACCCAGACTGACCACTGCCTC






TGCCTCTTCTTCTC








AR_r5_R
CACCAACCAGGTCTGGCCAAGCT
262
CACCAACCAG
454



GCTGTATTTTAGTGAGGTCTGGG






CCCCAGGAGCACTT








ATR_r44_F
GGAAGATACAGTTGTTGAGAAAA
263
GGAAGATACA
455



GGAAATTGAGAGAAAACACAATT






AGTAAGAGTAACTC








ATR_r44_R
TTTTAGATTTATATTGGCCTCAT
264
TTTTAGATTT
456



ATGTATATGGATATTTCATAGGC






ATTGTGTTTCTTTT








ATR_r45_F
TGTAGGGGCCAATAATTATATTC
265
TGTAGGGGCC
457



GAGGTTACTGTTAAATTATTTAC






AAAGTATAGGTGAT








ATR_r45_R
TTTGAGTAAAGATTTTTAAATTC
266
TTTGAGTAAA
458



TAACATTGTTAGTTTGTAATAAA






ATGTATTGTTTCTA








ATR_r46_F
CATATCAAGTTCATTTGTAGAGA
267
CATATCAAGT
459



TGAGGACTACAGCCCATATCAAG






CTATACCTTCTACT








ATR_r46_R
ATGTCAGCAAGATTTCTTCTTGC
268
ATGTCAGCAA
460



AAAGATAACATCATACCATAATA






TTTGTTTCAATTTT








ATR_r47_F
CAACCACAGATTCATACCAAATG
269
CAACCACAGA
461



CATTACTTTTAGATTATTAACAT






ATTCTTTTACATAA








ATR_r47_R
AAGAAAGGTAGTAATTCCAAATT
270
AAGAAAGGTA
462



ATTAACATCTGTTTTTGGTTTTA






TGTTTCTTCTTTTT








C4A_r20_F
GGCCTATGTGTGGCCACCCCAGT
271
GGCCTATGTG
463



CCAGCTCCGGGTGTTCCGCGAGT






TCCACCTGCACCTC








C4A_r24_R
AGGCGTGGCCTCCCTCTTGAGGC
272
AGGCGTGGCC
464



TTCCTCGAGGCTGTGGGGAGCAA






ACCATGATCTACTT








C4A_r1_F
CCTAGCTTGGCCAGAAGGTAGCA
273
CCTAGCTTGG
465



GACAGACAGACGGATCTAACCTC






TCTTGGATCCTCCA








C4A_r1_R
TGAATCGGGTCCCGATGCCAGCC
274
TGAATCGGGT
466



CTGCCCCAATCCAAGCACCCAGC






ATCCCGCCTCCAGG








C4A_r2_F
AGGGAGAGCAGGGGTGGAGGTGT
275
AGGGAGAGCA
467



CAGAGCGAAGTCTGACTGCTGAT






CCTGTCTGTTCTCC








C4A_r2_R
TGACACTTACAAGACAGATGGGA
276
TGACACTTAC
468



ACAGGGCAGGAGGCCCCCACAAG






CAGCAGGAGGGCAT








C4A_r3_F
CCTTTTTGGTCAGCTGTCTCTTG
277
CCTTTTTGGT
469



CTCTGTGACCCGCTCCCTCTCCC






TCTCCCTCTCCTGA








C4A_r3_R
CAAACTCATCCTGAGAGGGCTCG
278
CAAACTCATC
470



GAGGGGGTTAAAGGTTGAGGCCC






TGGGGCTGAGACTC








C4A_r4_F
AGTTTGACCCACCCTCCCCTTGC
279
AGTTTGACCC
471



ACATGGACCCCTGCTCACCTCTC






TCCTCCTCCACTCC








C4A_r4_R
AAGGGGAGAAGTGCTCACAGGCA
280
AAGGGGAGAA
472



GGAGGTCACATCAGTGGCCAGGA






TCAGGAAGGCCAGA








CCL4_r1_F
GTTCTGAAGCTTCTGAGTTCTGC
281
GTTCTGAAGC
473



AGCCTCACCTCTGAGAAAACCTC






TTTGCCACCAATAC








CCL4_r2_F
GGCAGTGTTGATCTCACCCTGGC
282
GGCAGTGTTG
474



CTTTCCTTTCAGTGGGCTCAGAC






CCTCCCACCGCCTG








CCL4_r2_R
ACCACAGCTGGCTGGGAGCAGAG
283
ACCACAGCTG
475



GCTGCTGGTCTCATAGTAATCTA






CCACAAAGTTGCGA








CCL4_r3_F
TCAGGTGACCTTCCCTGAAGACT
284
TCAGGTGACC
476



TCCTGTCTCTGAGCAGCTCAGTT






CAGTTCCAGGTCAT








CYP2C19_r1_F
GGAGCATATAGTGGGCCTAGGTG
285
GGAGCATATA
477



ATTGGCCACTTTATCCATCAAAG






AGGCACACACACTT








CYP2C19_r1_R
CCTTTCAAAGTATTTTACTTTAC
286
CCTTTCAAAG
478



AATGATCTCTTGTAACATTGTAC






CTCTAGGGATATAC








CYP2C19_r3_F
ATGGGGAGGATGGAAAACAGACT
287
ATGGGGAGGA
479



AGCAGAGCTTCTCGGGCAGAGCT






TGGCCCATCCACAT








CYP2C19_r3_R
GATCTGGCCACCCCTGAAATGTT
288
GATCTGGCCA
480



TCCAAGAATGTCAGTAGAGAGGA






GAGCAGTCCAGAAA








CYP2C19_r5_F
AGCAACCAGAGCTTGGCATATTG
289
AGCAACCAGA
481



TATCTATACCTTTATTAAATGCT






TTTAATTTAATAAATT








CYP2C19_r5_R
CAAAACTAGTCAATGAATCACAA
290
CAAAACTAGT
482



ATACGCAAGCAGTCACATAACTA






AGCTTTTGTTAACA








CYP2C9_r1_F
AAGGAGCATATAGTGGACCTAGG
291
AAGGAGCATA
483



TGATTGGTCAATTTATCCATCAA






AGAGGCACACACCG








CYP2C9_r1_F
AGCCTTTCAAAGTATTTTACTTT
292
AGCCTTTCAA
484



ACCATTACCTCTTGTAACATGTA






CCTCTAGGGATACA








CYP2C9_r3_F
GGGGAGGATGGAAAACAGAGACT
293
GGGGAGGATG
485



TACAGAGCTCCTCGGGCAGAGCT






TGGCCCATCCACAT








CYP2C9_r3_R
GATATGGCCACCCCTGAAATGTT
294
GATATGGCCA
486



TCCAAGAATGTCAGTAGAGAAGA






TAGTAGTCCAGTAA








CYP2C9_r5_F
CTCAACCAGAGCTTGGTATATGG
295
CTCAACCAGA
487



TATGTATGCTTTTATTAAAATCT






TTTAATTTAATAAATT








CYP2C9_r5_R
CAGAACTAGTCAACAAATCACAA
296
CAGAACTAGT
488



ATTCACAAGCAGTCACATAACTA






AGCTTTTGTTTACA








CYP2D6_r1_F
GGAAGTCCCCCAAACCTGCTTCC
297
GGAAGTCCCC
489



CCTTCTCAGCCTGGCTTCTGGTC






CAGCCTGTGGTTTC








CYP2D6_r1_R
GCCTGGTGGGGTGGGGGTGCCAG
298
GCCTGGTGGG
490



GTGTGTCCAGAGGAGCCCATTTG






GTAGTGAGGCAGGT








CYP2D6_r2_F
GCCCAGCTCGGACTACGGTCATC
299
GCCCAGCTCG
491



ACCCACCCGGGTCCCACGGAAAT






CTGTCTCTGTCCCC








CYP2D6_r2_R
AATAGGACTAGGACCTGTAGTCT
300
AATAGGACTA
492



GGGGGGATCCTGGCTTGACAAGA






GGCCCTGACCCTCC








CYP2D6_r5_F
AAGTTCATGGGCCCCCGCCTGTA
301
AAGTTCATGG
493



CCCTTCCTCCCTCGGCCCCTGCA






CTGTTTCCCAGATG








CYP2D6_r5_R
GGGCTGACAGGTGCAGAATTGGA
302
GGGCTGACAG
494



GGTCATTTGGGGGCTACCCCGTT






CTGTCCCGAGTATG








CYP2D6_r8_F
CATTGCTTTATTGTACATTAGAG
303
CATTGCTTTA
495



CCTCTGGCTAGGGAGCAGGCTGG






GGACTAGGTACCCC








CYP2D6_r8_R
TGGAGTCTTGCAGGGGTATCACC
304
TGGAGTCTTG
496



CAGGAGCCAGGCTCACTGACGCC






CCTCCCCTCCCCAC








DCC_r1_F
AGTGCATGTGTGTGAGTGCTGCC
305
AGTGCATGTG
497



GCTGCCCGCGACCCCTGGCCCCG






AAGGTGTTGGCTGA








DCC_r1_R
AATGAGAAGGGAAGTGGGGTACG
306
AATGAGAAGG
498



GAAGGGGGTGCGACGAGAAGAAA






GGAAAGAGCCACTT








DCC_r2_F
GGAATCTAAGCCTGAGATTTATT
307
GGAATCTAAG
499



TGAATACATGAACATATTTCCCT






GTGCTCTCTTGTTC








DCC_r2_R
AAGATGGCATTCATCTGGCCTTG
308
AAGATGGCAT
500



GGAATGGATGAAAGGAAGCAGCA






ACTTTCAAATGGGT








DCC_r2
GGTAAAGTCCCTCATCTGGCTTG
309
GGTAAAGTCC
501



TGGTGTCTGGAATGAAGTATGTT






TTGTATCAGCAGAG








DCC_r3_F
TTTATTGGCGATTATTGTGCTTT
310
TTTATTGGCG
502



ATTTGGAAGACTTATTCTTCCTT






CTTTGTTTTTCTCC








DCC_r3_R
GAAAAAAATTGTTTTTCAACTTA
311
GAAAAAAATT
503



TTCCAGAGAATATCATTCTGAAG






GCAACAAAGAGCAT








DCC_r4_F
ATATATCATTTATCTTTGCAATG
312
ATATATCATT
504



TTTTTCATATATCATATGATACT






GTGTTTTCCCCTCA








DCC_r4_R
ATTAGAGAAATATAAATAGCAGC
313
ATTAGAGAAA
505



ATATACCATACAAAAGTACACTT






TACAAAAAAGTCTT








EP300_r18_F
ATACTCCATCTCCCGTAAAAATA
314
ATACTCCATC
506



GTGAGACTTGAGTAATGTTTGAT






GTCACTTGTCTTTC








EP300_r18_R
CAGTCACCACTATATTATTCTAG
315
CAGTCACCAC
507



GTATCCCAGAAAAGTTAAAGTCA






AATCTGAAACACAT








EP300_r19_F
TTCTTACTGTTCTAGCTTGTCCT
316
TTCTTACTGT
508



TAAGGCCTCTGTGCTTTTTAACA






AATGGTTTCTTTTG








EP300_r19_R
TCCGCATGCACTCCCTGGACATG
317
TCCGCATGCA
509



TGGACACATGGACCATGGTCCAC






ACCTGGCCAAGCTT








EP300_r20_F
CTTGGCTTGGGCTGTGTTGTGTG
318
CTTGGCTTGG
510



AACGGAACAGTTCACCCCAGTAT






GGCCTTCTTGCCGA








EP300_r20_R
GCTGTGCATAATCACTGGACAAC
319
GCTGTGCATA
511



AAACTAATTAGCACTTTTCAAAA






TAATGCAGTTACTT








EP300_r21_F
GAACAGCAGTCAGATTGCTCATC
320
GAACAGCAGT
512



TCTATCACTTTTTCTCATTGTGT






CCCTTTTCTCTCCT








EP300_r21_R
AGAGAATGAAAGGGAAAAAGAAA
321
AGAGAATGAA
513



AGCCAAAGCGTACTGACTATTCA






AGGGGATCGTACTT








EP300_r22_F
TATTGCAAGTTTTCATTTGGTTA
322
TATTGCAAGT
514



AGGTTTGGGGTTAATTTTGGAAT






TGGCTCTGCTCTTC








EP300_r22_R
AAAACTTGTTAATATTCACGATA
323
AAAACTTGTT
515



AAGAAAAATTCCAGAGAAAGTAA






CAACGTTAAGACTT








PTEN_r1_F
GCAGAAGAAGCCCCGCCACCAGC
324
GCAGAAGAAG
516



AGCTTCTGCCATCTCTCTCCTCC






TTTTTCTTCAGCCA








PTEN_r1_R
CTACTCCCACGTTCTAAGAGAGT
325
CTACTCCCAC
517



GACAGAAAGGTAAAGAGGAGCAG






CCGCAGAAATGGAT








PTEN_r2_F
AGTATTCTTTTAGTTTGATTGCT
326
AGTATTCTTT
518



GCATATTTCAGATATTTCTTTCC






TTAACTAAAGTACT








PTEN_r2_R
AATGAAAACACAACATGAATATA
327
AATGAAAACA
519



AACATCAATATTTGAAATAGAAA






ATCAAAGCATTCTT








PTEN_r3_F
GTAATTTCAAATGTTAGCTCATT
328
GTAATTTCAA
520



TTTGTTAATGGTGGCTTTTTGTT






TGTTTGTTTTGTTT








PTEN_r3_R
CTTTCACTTAATAGTTGTTTTAG
329
CTTTCACTTA
521



AAGATATTTGCAAGCATACAAAT






AAGAAAACATACTT








PTEN_r4_F
GTACTTTTTTTTCTTCCTAAGTG
330
GTACTTTTTT
522



CAAAAGATAACTTTATATCACTT






TTAAACTTTTCTTT








PTEN_r4_R
ACAGTAAGATACAGTCTATCGGG
331
ACAGTAAGAT
523



TTTAAGTTATACAACATAGTACA






GTACATTCATACCT








PTEN_r5_F
TACTTGTTAATTAAAAATTCAAG
332
TACTTGTTAA
524



AGTTTTTTTTTCTTATTCTGAGG






TTATCTTTTTACCA








PTEN_r5_R
CCAAAATCTGTTTTCCAATAAAT
333
CCAAAATCTG
525



TCTCAGATCCAGGAAGAGGAAAG






GAAAAACATCAAAA








RHD_r1_F
TCAAGTAGGTGTTGGAGAGAGGG
334
TCAAGTAGGT
526



GTGATGCCTGGTGCTGGTGGAAC






CCCTGCACAGAGAC








RHD_r2_F
CCTGTCCTTTCGGGGTCCATTCC
335
CCTGTCCTTT
527



CTCTATGACCCAGAAGTGATCCA






GCCACCATCCCAAT








RHD_r5_F
AACCCCTCGAGGCTCAGACCTTT
336
AACCCCTCGA
528



GGAGCAGGAGTGTGATTCTGGCC






AACCACCCTCTCTG








RHD_r5_R
CATAAATATGTGTGCTAGTCCTG
337
CATAAATATG
529



TTAGACCCAAGTGCTGCCCAAGG






GCAGCGCCCTGCTC








RHD_r6_F
TTGCAGCAAGATGGTGTTCTCTC
338
TTGCAGCAAG
530



TCTACCTTGCTTCCTTTACCCAC






ACGCTATTTCTTTG








RHD_r7_F
GAGATCAAGCCAAAATCAGTATG
339
GAGATCAAGC
531



TGGGTTCATCTGCAATAAAAATG






TTTGTTTTGCTTTT








RHD_r7_R
GCAACAGTGAGAGGAAGTTGTCT
340
GCAACAGTGA
532



TGTTTTTGAACAGGCCTTGTTTT






TCTTGGATGCTTTT








RUNX1_r1_F
CTGCCATTTCATTACAGGCAAAG
341
CTGCCATTTC
533



CTGAGCAAAAGTAGATATTACAA






GACCAGCATGTACT








RUNX1_r1_R
AAGGTAAAAGAAATCATTGAGTC
342
AAGGTAAAAG
534



CCCCGCCTTCAGAAGAGGGTGCA






TTTTCAGGAGGAAG








RUNX1_r3_F
GCGGATCTCCCCCGGCCTCGCCG
343
GCGGATCTCC
535



GCCTCCGCCTGTCCTCCCACCAC






CCTCTCCGGGCCAG








RUNX1_r3_R
CTGGTAGGAGCTGTTTGCAGGGT
344
CTGGTAGGAG
536



CCTAACTCAATCGGCTTGTTGTG






ATGCGTATCCCCGT








RUNX1_r4_F
TTTTGAAATGTGGGTTTGTTGCC
345
TTTTGAAATG
537



ATGAAACGTGTTTCAAGCATAGT






TTTGACAGATAACG








RUNX1_r4_R
TGCCCTAAAAGTGTATGTATAAC
346
TGCCCTAAAA
538



ATCCCTGATGTCTGCATTTGTCC






TTTGACTGGTGTTT








RUNX1_r5_F
GTATACCAGCCTGGAGGGTGTAC
347
GTATACCAGC
539



CAGCCTGGAGGGTGTACCAGCCC






CAAGTGGATGCACT








RUNX1_r5_R
TTCAACAGATATGTTCAGGCCAC
348
TTCAACAGAT
540



CAACCTCATTCTGTTTTGTTCTC






TATCGTGTCCCCAC








SKI_r4_F
AGGATGTGTCTGGGTGGTGCTTG
349
AGGATGTGTC
541



GGGACAGAGGCACCTTCCCGACA






CCCGCCTGCCCCTC








SKI_r4_R
CCTCAGCCAGTGCCACCCCCACA
350
CCTCAGCCAG
542



GCCCACAGGGAGGAGGCACAGAA






AGCGACTCACACGT








SKI_r5_F
CTGGTGTGGAGCTGCCGGGCACT
351
CTGGTGTGGA
543



TCCATGACTTTGTTTCTGTCTCT






GCTTCCTCCTCAGT








SKI_r5_R
CTGGTGCAGGCTGTGCTCACTGC
352
CTGGTGCAGG
544



CCGTGCCCTGGACCTCCCAGCAC






CACTCGCCCCGCTC








SKI_r6_F
GTCATGGTGAGGGGTGTGCTGGG
353
GTCATGGTGA
545



ACCGGCTGGGCAGTGACCCCGAG






CCGCCTCCGGCCCC








SKI_r6_R
CCGGGGCCCACGGCGGCTCCACG
354
CCGGGGCCCA
546



CCCACCGTGCTGCGTGCCTCAGT






CTCCCCACCCGCAT








SRY_r1_F
CTGTAAGTTATCGTAAAAAGGAG
355
CTGTAAGTTA
547



CATCTAGGTAGGTCTTTGTAGCC






AATGTTACCCGATT








SRY_r1_M1
AGTAAAATAAGTTTCGAACTCTG
356
AGTAAAATAA
548



GCACCTTTCAATTTTGTCGCACT






CTCCTTGTTTTTGA








SRY_r1_M2
GAAGCAAACTGCAATTCTTCGGC
357
GAAGCAAACT
549



AGCATCTTCGCCTTCCGACGAGG






TCGATACTTATAAT








SRY_r1_M3
AATGGCCATTCTTCCAGGAGGCA
358
AATGGCCATT
550



CAGAAATTACAGGCCATGCACAG






AGAGAAATACCCGA








SRY_r1_M4
CTTGCGCCTCTGATCGCGAGACC
359
CTTGCGCCTC
551



ACACGATGAATGCGTTCATGGGT






CGCTTCACTCTATC








SRY_r1_R
GAAAGCTGTAACTCTAAGTATCA
360
GAAAGCTGTA
552



GTGTGAAACGGGAGAAAACAGTA






AAGGCAACGTCCAG








TNFRSF14_r1_F
AGTTCCTCTGCTGGAGTTCATCC
361
AGTTCCTCTG
553



TGCTAGCTGGGTTCCCGAGCTGC






CGGTCTGAGCCTGA








TNFRSF14_r1_R
TCTGTGGGAGGCCCTGGGGTCAG
362
TCTGTGGGAG
554



AACTGGGATCTGCGAGCAGACGG






AGAGGAGGCTCGGG








TNFRSF14_r2_F
CAAGCCTGGCAGAGCCCACAGGG
363
CAAGCCTGGC
555



CAGCCAGGGCATCTCCCAATGCC






TGTCCTGACCCCCT








TNFRSF14_r2_R
TGTCTGGGGCAGAAGGGGGCAAG
364
TGTCTGGGGC
556



AGTGTCTGCCCTCGGCCCACAGA






GCTGGCCCGCCAAA








TNFRSF14_r3_F
TGATGGGTGGGCTCCCGAAGGGG
365
TGATGGGTGG
557



CCTCCCGCAGACTTGCGAAGTTC






CCACTCTCTGGGCG








TNFRSF14_r3_R
CAGGGTGCGGGGGCATCCAGGCT
366
CAGGGTGCGG
558



GCCCAAGCGGAGGCTGGGCCGGC






TGTGCTGGCCTCTT








UGT1A1_rP_P
CTCCACCTTCTTTATCTCTGAAA
367
CTCCACCTTC
559



GTGAACTCCCTGCTACCTTTGTG






GACTGACAGCTTTT








UGT1A1_r1_F
TCGATCCAAAGTAATACATCTGA
368
TCGATCCAAA
560



AAGAATATACGCATGTAAAAGTC






CCACTCCAATACAC








UGT1A1_r1_M1
CTGCAGCAGAGGGGACATGAAAT
369
CTGCAGCAGA
561



AGTTGTCCTAGCACCTGACGCCT






CGTTGTACATCAGA








UGT1A1_r1_M2
ACTCTTTCACATCCTCCCTTTGG
370
ACTCTTTCAC
562



AATGGCACAGGGTACGTCTTCAA






GGTGTAAAATGCTC








UGT1A1_r1_M3
GCGTGTGATCAAAACATACAAGA
371
GCGTGTGATC
563



AAATAAAAAAGGACTCTGCTATG






CTTTTGTCTGGCTG








UGT1A1_r1_M4
ACATCAAAGCTGCTTTCTGCCAG
372
ACATCAAAGC
564



GGAGGCCATGAGCTCCTTGTTGT






GCAGTAAGTGGGAA








UGT1A1_r1_M5
CTCTGCCCACTGTATTCTTCTTG
373
CTCTGCCCAC
565



CATGCACTGCCATGCAGCCTGGA






ATTTGAGGCTACCC








UGT1A1_r1_M6
TCATGTGATCTGAATGAGAGGAG
374
TCATGTGATC
566



AGAGGCCTGGGCACGTAGGAGAA






TGGGTTGGGGCACT








UGT1A1_r1_M7
TGCGACGTGGTTTATTCCCCGTA
375
TGCGACGTGG
567



TGCAACCCTTGCCTCAGAATTCC






TTCAGAGAGAGGTG








UGT1A1_r1_R
CTTCACAAAGTCACTTCTAAACA
376
CTTCACAAAG
568



GCCAGACAGATGCAGAGCTCAAT






AGGTCCTGGACAGT








UGT1A1_r2_F
ACTGTATGTAGTCATCAAAGAAT
377
ACTGTATGTA
569



ATGAGAAAAAATTAACTGAAAAT






TTTTCTTCTGGCTC








UGT1A1_r2_R
ATTAATCTGGAAGCTGGAAGTCT
378
ATTAATCTGG
570



GGGATTAGCGCTCCTGTGAAAAT






AGATATGAGGCCAT








UGT1A1_r3_F
CAGATTTGTTTTCTAATCATATT
379
CAGATTTGTT
571



ATGTTCTTTCTTTACGTTCTGCT






CTTTTTGCCCCTCC








UGT1A1_r3_R
GCTTAAGCCATTTTCTTAATTTG
380
GCTTAAGCCA
572



ACCCTGGTTTGACCTATACATCC






AATCCGCCCAACAT








UGT1A1_r4_F
TGTGTCCAGCTGTGAAACTCAGA
381
TGTGTCCAGC
573



GATGTAACTGCTGACATCCTCCC






TATTTTGCATCTCA








UGT1A1_r4_R
ATTTGAAACAATTTTATCATGAA
382
ATTTGAAACA
574



TGCCATGACCAAAGTATTCTTCT






GTATCTTCTTTCTT








UGT1A1_r5_F
ATAAAGAGAGGATTGTTCATACC
383
ATAAAGAGAG
575



ACAGGTGTTCCAGGCATAACGAA






ACTGTCTTTGTGTT








UGT1A1_r5_R
TTTTCAAGTTTGGAAATGACTAG
384
TTTTCAAGTT
576



GGAATGGTTCAAAATTTTACCTT






ATTTCCCACCCACT








VHL_r1_F
CGCCCCGCGTCCGACCCGCGGAT
385
CGCCCCGCGT
577



CCCGCGGCGTCCGGCCCGGGTGG






TCTGGATCGCGGAG








VHL_r1_M1
TAGAGGGGCTTCAGACCGTGCTA
386
TAGAGGGGCT
578



TCGTCCCTGCTGGGTCGGGCCTA






AGCGCCGGGCCCGT








VHL_r1_M2
GGCGCCGAGGAGGAGATGGAGGC
387
GGCGCCGAGG
579



CGGGCGGCCGCGGCCCGTGCTGC






GCTCGGTGAACTCG








VHL_r1_R
CCATACGGGCAGCACGACGCGCG
388
CCATACGGGC
580



GACTGCGATTGCAGAAGATGACC






TGGGAGGGCTCGCG








VHL_r2_F
GGTGTGGGCCACCGTGCCCAGCC
389
GGTGTGGGCC
581



ACCGGTGTGGCTCTTTAACAACC






TTTGCTTGTCCCGA








VHL_r2_R
AAGTGGTCTATCCTGTACTTACC
390
AAGTGGTCTA
582



ACAACAACCTTATCTTTTTAAAA






AGTAAAACGTCAGT








VHL_r3_F
CTTGTTCGTTCCTTGTACTGAGA
391
CTTGTTCGTT
583



CCCTAGTCTGCCACTGAGGATTT






GGTTTTTGCCCTTC








VHL_r3_R
ATCAAGACTCATCAGTACCATCA
392
ATCAAGACTC
584



AAAGCTGAGATGAAACAGTGTAA






GTTTCAACAGAAAT









In paired-end sequencing experiments, read_1 and read_2 are derived from the same DNA clone. This implies that the read_1 genomic sequence (parts (3) and (4) in FIG. 24) is present because it was associated with a particular probe (part (5) in FIG. 24). Taken in total, this data indicates that each DNA sequence present in a collection of next-generation sequences can be associated with the probe sequence that targeted it. All DNA sequences associated with a particular probe can be retrieved.


The present paradigm for next-generation resequencing analysis (targeted or otherwise) is to align reads back to a reference genome. Knowledge of the targeting probe association affords a novel workflow in which reads are first sorted by probe and then analyzed by either alignment-based methods, de novo assembly methods, or both. As described in Example 14, probe-associated-read-scaffold-assembly (PARSAR) solves one of the more complex and difficult issues in variant discovery, which is that the most interesting variants are those that deviate most significantly from the reference sequence, yet these are the very sequences that will be most refractile to conventional sequence based alignment (FIG. 25). Using probe-association followed by de novo local assembly, such variants are easily identified.


Probe-based read grouping is used in conjunction with other aspects of molecular design to identify variants with a high-degree of first-pass confidence. As shown in FIG. 26, probes are generally designed to bracket target regions. The overlapping aspect of reads allows potential variant sites to be queried by independent reads in both orientations. In addition, this dual-probe design ensures that adjacent probe binding sites themselves are sequenced. This is an important feature where probe capture performance may be in question. As an example, variant alleles where single nucleotide variants underlie one of the capture probe sequences are identified by this molecular design and can be accounted for in downstream informatics analysis.


An additional aspect of flow of information from molecular annotation to downstream variant analysis involves sequence “tags”, defined as the combination of a three base sequence label and ragged sequence start sites ((1)+(3) in FIG. 24). Sequence tags define the uniqueness of each sequencing clone. As illustrated in FIG. 27, variants that occur within a collection of sibling clones that share identical sequence tags are likely to be false positives. In contrast, variants are shared among sequences with different tags—even if they occur at low frequency—have a higher probability of being true positive variants. This system of tagging sequences and using tags to assign confidence predictions to variant calling has the prospect of substantially decreasing the burden of downstream variant validation (which can be costly and time consuming). Molecular annotation is described in more detail in the document Example 16, which describes the molecular technology sequencing platform.


In summary, one of the distinguishing features of the technology platforms contemplated herein is the fact that all “annealing probe” events are copied into DNA clones that also possess additional molecular annotation. Sequences are segregated by probe and by sample labels into a collection belonging to a specific target region of a specific input sample. Combinations of alignment and de novo assembly can then be used for variant detection. Finally, redundancy in the appearance of candidate variants can be used to assign confidence in variant calling. In addition to variant analysis, methods for copy number determination were also provided. These two elements are tightly coupled, specifically because copy number determination is dependent on high confidence sequencing reads. The overall schema for determining copy number from sequence information is shown in FIG. 28.


Example 16: Molecular Technology Sequencing Platform

Overview:


The genomic sequencing platforms contemplated herein provide methods to: (1) Address genomic samples from multiple individuals in a single sequencing run; (2) Detect single (and/or multiple) nucleotide variants (SNVs) and single (and/or multiple) nucleotide insertions and deletions (SNIDs) with high confidence; (3) Detect large and small scale copy number variations (CNVs) in all queried gene environments; (4) Detect micro-scale translocations, inversions and insertion/deletion events in queried gene environments; (5) Develop a technological system that is scalable from ≥exome-scale investigation (≥1-2% of the overall human genome sequence) to ≤single gene-scale validation; (6) Achieve high specificity (low false-negative rate) and high sensitivity (low false-positive rate) in genomic variation tests; (7) Create a molecular and bioinformatics technology that is simple, portable and scalable in its execution; and (8) Provide molecular methods that are readily amenable to quality control measurements.


The overall schematic of genomic sequencing read is shown in FIG. 29. A description of each element is as follows:


(1) The “sequence label” is a set of (contiguous*) nucleotides (i.e. a unique set of 3 mers) that is used in conjunction with the read start position (3) to establish the uniqueness of each sequencing read. In founding documents, the combination of this label and the read start point were referred to as the “unique sequence tag.” Because the sequence label is the first set of bases encountered and in sequencing-by-synthesis (SBS) chemistry all four DNA bases must be equally represented at each read position, the constraints on the sequencing label are not only uniqueness, but also that the collection of bases used in the collective set of sequence labels must have all four bases present at all positions sequenced. The use of unique sequence tags to determine local CNVs is described in the bioinformatics section of this document.


(2) The “sample label” is a set of (contiguous*) nucleotide codes that uniquely identify a particular sample within a set of multiplexed samples. As with the sequencing label, the collection of sample labels must also contain all four bases to satisfy the requirements of SBS sequence base calling. The sample codes are intentionally positioned next to genomic DNA fragments. The driver for this design is ligation bias, meaning that there are base preferences for DNA ligation efficiency in the ˜2 bases upstream and the 1-2 bases downstream of the ligation junction. By placing the sample code at the ligation junction, all fragments within a specific sample experience the ligation influences/biases. *—Without wishing to be bound to any particular theory, it is contemplated that the sequence labels and sample labels could be created as inter-digitated nucleotide sequences.


(3) The “read start point” within genomic fragments is one of two key elements that define a “unique sequence read.” As discussed in section (1) above, the unique identifying “tag” for each read is comprised of the sequencing label AND the read start point. As considered in more detail below, the collection of unique [(1)+(3)] sequence tags is essential for determination of large scale CNV. Here “large scale CNV” is defined as any CNV that involves the entirety of at least one probe binding region plus some adjacent sequence. Large scale CNV can be as large as gain or loss of entire chromosomes.


[(1)+(2)] The sequence label and sample label are embedded in adaptor sequences that are ligated to end-repaired genomic fragments in the initial stage of library construction process where a whole genome library is created.


(4) The sequencing read. The sequence information from genomic fragments is, of course, a central focus of the genomic assays. Each read is considered in the context of multiple, overlapping reads produced within the same assay.


(5) The probe level—“genomic indexing.” The overall genomics assay strategy is to combine multiple sequence labels into a composite “molecular annotation” that places each sequencing read into a larger framework of genomic analysis. Within this operational paradigm, Read 1 reveals elements (1-4) of each annotated clone. Read 2 reveals the probe sequence that retrieved each clone by hybridization based capture and subsequent enzymatic processing. The probe sequence information is central to the genomics strategy because all reads are initially clustered according to the probe that captured them. This clustering of information on a probe-by-probe basis is termed “genomic indexing” because each read is indexed to a genomic probe prior to analysis.


One of the interesting features of the probe label is that the constellation of all probe sequences within a capture reaction is well-defined (we know which probes went into the capture reaction). This implies that Read 2 does not necessarily need to cover the entire 60 nt probe sequence. Rather, Read 2 only needs to be of sufficient length to enable unambiguous identification of all probes within a specific reaction. As one non-limiting example, the probe set discussed in Example 15 consists of 192 probes that can be differentiated based on only 7 nt of 5′ probe sequence (two of the probes with identical 7 nt 5′ termini were tagged with dinucleotide codes so they could be informatically differentiated).


(6) The capture label. The composition of the libraries is determined by the intimate molecular interaction between probes and target sequences. The performance of each unique probe sequence can be monitored using the capture label, which can be as simple as a string of several (4-6) random bases. The diversity and statistical distribution of capture labels detected in sequencing is a direct measure of probe performance. By way of example, imagine a case where very few sequences are associated with a particular probe sequence. It may be tempting to attribute this deficit of sequences to poor probe performance, and therefore to initiate iterative cycles of probe redesigns. However, sequence under-representation may also be a consequence of sequences that do not ligate well to adaptors and or sequences that do not amplify well with the particular PCR regimen that is used. The use of capture labels allows differentiation of these failure modes. With poor probe performance, the very few capture events that do occur will manifest as very few capture labels that show up multiple times. In contrast, poor representation for reasons upstream of the actual capture reaction (ligation, PCR, end-repair, etc.) will result in a large constellation of capture labels that will be, by and large, uniquely represented. In particular embodiments, as one transitions into automated designs of thousands of probes, the ability to informatically QC probe performance will become increasingly important.


Example 17: Probe Selection and Implementation

Summary:


Probe sequence selection and the methods to use them have, necessarily, been developed in concert. This example describes probe selection criterion in Section I and the laboratory methods that make them most effective in Section II. See, e.g., FIG. 30.


Section I. Selection of Targeting Probes.

In the most general terms, target enrichment probes are 60 nt in length. Probes are generally directional, meaning they capture sequences on one side (generally the 3′ side) of their position. Tail sequences that add additional functionality (e.g., PCR primer binding site, binding site for complementary oligo that enables biotin pull-out, etc) are added in addition to the core targeting 60-mer. Sixty nucleotide targeting sequences are chosen with the following constraints and criterion: (1) The probe is positioned from −100 to +50 nt relative to the start of the target sequence. In FIG. 30, the “start” of the target sequence is the intron:exon junction; (2) Probes are designed with redundancy, as illustrated, such that the resulting sequences from a pair of probes are overlapping in opposite orientations; (3) Probes are selected (where possible) to possess GC content not less than 33% (>20 G's or C's per 60 mer) and not more than 67% (<40 G's or C's per 60 mer); (4) Probes are selected to avoid repeats wherever possible. This is done with the help of REPEATMASKER and/or unique alignability criterion, both of which can be viewed on the UCSC genome browser; and (5) In case the position requirement, GC requirement, and the uniqueness requirement cannot be met, selection rules are relaxed in the following order (GC>position>uniqueness). In other words, GC and positioning are flexible; the uniqueness criterion is not.


Section II. Laboratory Methods.

The input to target enrichment is probes, a gDNA library, and buffers, which have been described elsewhere herein. The first step in targeted enrichment is melting of the gDNA library, which begins in a form as double-stranded PCR fragments. This is achieved by denaturation of the gDNA, preferably at a concentration of 100 ng/μL in a total volume of 10 μL, at 98° C. for 2 min followed by immediate transfer to ice. The gDNA library is suspended in a low salt buffer that contains 10 mM Tris pH 8.0 and 0.1 mM EDTA. The second step is to add 5 L of concentrated binding buffer (4M NaCl, 40 mM Tris pH 8.0, 0.4 mM EDTA and 0.4% Tween20). While these conditions are specific, the overarching concept is that the concentration of salt must be increased to 2N osmolarity to achieve rapid kinetic association of complementary DNA strands. Five microliters of probe is also added such that the final concentration of probe is 250 pM in each probe. The mixture of gDNA library, buffer and probe is heated to 98° C. for 2 min and cooled in 1° C. increments for four min each down to 68° C. In the third step, probe:gDNA complexes (the probe has a biotin associated with it) are bound to magnetic beads that are coated with streptavidin. In the fourth step, stringent washing is used to remove unwanted associations between probe and non-target sequences that may occur because of, for example, short matches of nucleotide sequence between probe and gDNA. Stringency is achieved by using low-salt, high-formamide wash buffer as, for example, a buffer containing 30%-35% formamide (v/v), 10 mM Tris pH 8.0, 0.1 mM EDTA and 0.5% Tween 20). Several washes of the beads are used to achieve the desired purity of target sequence (e.g., four). The washed beads possess target sequences bound to probe that are processed, amplified, and sequenced. In summary, low salt melting of the gDNA library, high salt probe annealing, and high formamide washes are used in concert with probe designs to achieve high levels of target sequence enrichment.


Example 18: Exemplary Sequences

Overview:


Exemplary genome tags, sample codes and library information are shown in Tables 27-29 below.









TABLE 27





Exemplary Genome tags


Genome tags




















APC
CAA
GAT
TAG







ACA
CCC
GCG
TCT







AGT
CGG
GGC
TGA







ATG
CTT
GTA
TTC

















TABLE 28





Exemplary Sample Codes


Sample codes




















GAA
TCA
CGA
ATA







TAC
GCC
AGC
CTC







APG
CCG
TGG
GTG







CAT
ACT
GGT
TTT

















TABLE 29







Exemplary Library












Genome
Sample





tags
codes
Sample ID
Input







AAC
ATA
NA18917
 50 genomes







ACA
CCG
NA18917
100 genomes







AGT
GGT
NA18917
200 genomes







ATG
TAC
NA18917
400 genomes







CAA
AGC
NA12878
 50 genomes







CCC
CAT
NA12878
100 genomes







CGG
GTG
NA12878
200 genomes







CTT
TCA
NA12878
400 genomes







GAT







GCG







GGC







GTA







TAG







TCT







TGA







TTC










Example 19: Construction of Tagged, Targeted, Genomic Library

Summary:


Several ways to construct tagged, targeted genomic sequencing libraries are contemplated herein. In this embodiment, DNA repair is used to attach probe-associated sequences to captured genomic fragments. This approach worked well for creating sequence-ready targeted genomic libraries.


Concept:


An important principle of the library construction is that the sequence ready clones are comprised of DNA sequences derived from both genomic fragments and capture probes. This “recombination” of parts greatly enriches for those genomic fragments that are in direct contact with probe, and it enables focused sequencing reads on one side of a probe sequence. In this design, the tripartite complex formed between the target genomic library fragment, the capture probe and the common partner oligo possesses a structure reminiscent of a DNA replication fork. Such forks occur during normal DNA replication, but they also occur during DNA repair processes. In the latter case, it is often necessary to trim 5′ displaced strands to enable joining of the newly polymerized strand to the adjacent 3′ sequence. This repair process requires two enzymes and three enzymatic activities. DNA polymerase holoenzymes like E. coli DNA polymerase or Bst DNA polymerase possess two of these activities, a 5′ to 3′ endonuclease activity that removes these 5′ displaced flaps and, of course, DNA polymerase activity.


In particular embodiments, Bst polymerase is preferred because it also lacks 3′ to 5′ nuclease activity that is often associated with DNA polymerase holoenzymes. See, e.g., FIG. 31. This feature is useful because it suggests that the single-stranded 3′ DNA protrusions of the target genomic clones do not require protection. The other enzyme and activity required is a nick-closing DNA ligase such as the NAD+-requiring Taq DNA ligase. Following processing, processed fragments are amplified by PCR to allow for size selection and quantification prior to sequencing.


Proof of Principle Oligonucleotides:


For this experiment, eight target regions were chosen that correspond to eight genomic regions for which we have qPCR assays. The forward and reverse primers for these eight regions are shown in Table 30. The capture probes are the exact reverse complement of capture probes that were used and validated elsewhere herein. These probes span a % GC range from 22% to 73% as noted in Table 32.









TABLE 30





Proof of principle oligonucleotides


















SEQ ID
qPCR




NO:
Assay
Name
Sequence





585
17
SRY_F
CTGGTGCTCCATTCTTGAGTGTGT


586

SRY_R
GGACAACAGGTTGTACAGGGATGA





587
18
VHL_F
TACAGGAGACTGGACATCGTCAGG


588

VHL_R
CTTTCTGCACATTTGGGTGGTCTT





589
19
UGT_F
GGTGATCAGATGGACAATGCAAAG


590

UGT_R
TCATTTCCAGAACATTCAGGGTCA





591
20
TNF_F
ACCTCAATGGCCTAAGCAAGTGTC


592

TNF_R
GCCTCTTACCTGGGTCACACATTT





593
21
RUNX_F
ATCTTGCAACCTGGTTCTTCATGG


594

RUNX_R
GCTGGCAATGATGAAAACTACTCG





595
22
RHD_F
CCAAGTTTCAACTCTGCTCTGCTG


596

RHD_R
GTTGAACACGGCATTCTTCCTTTC





597
23
PTEN_F
GGAAAGGGACGAACTGGTGTAATG


598

PTEN_R
AAATCTAGGGCCTCTTGTGCCTTT





599
24
EP300_F
AGCCCCATGGATCTTTCTACCATT


600

EP300_R
ATACTGCCAGGGCTCCTGATACTG






Capture



probe
Name
Sequence





601
17
SRY_rlf_V3
ATCGGGTAACATTGGCTACAAAGACCTACCTAGATGC





TCCTTTTTACGATAACTTACAGGTGAAAACCAGGATCA





ACTCCCGTGCCAGTCACATCTCGT





602

SRY_rlr_V3
ATTATAAGTATCGACCTCGTCGGAAGGCGAAGATGCTG





CCGAAGAATTGCAGTTTGCTTCGTGAAAACCAGGATCA





ACTCCCGTGCCAGTCACATCTCGT









Probes were synthesized as ultramers by IDT, rehydrated to 100 uM, and pooled; each probe in the pool is present at 6.25 uM. To create a 100× stock solution in which each probe was present at 100 nM, 10 uM of pool and 10 μL of 100 uM common, biotinylated partner oligo were combined in 605 μL of TEzero+0.05% Tween 20 (TT). The 100× stock was further diluted 100-fold (10 μL into 990 μL TT) to give a working solution in which each probe is present at a concentration of 1 nM.


Capture/Processing Protocols:


One objective of the proof of principle study was to validate probe performance and test the efficiency of processing on sequence-ready library yield. The genomic library pool was derived from a 16 sample set library. For probe annealing, four of 10 μL library aliquots in separate PCR strip tubes were heated to 98° C. for 2 min and cooled on ice. Five μL of 4× bind buffer and five μL of probe were added to each tube, and the solution was annealed using a 1° C. step for four min thermal cycler program from 98° C. to 69° C. Annealed complexes were bound to streptavidin-coated magnetic beads, washed four times with 25% formamide-containing wash buffer and one time with TEzero. The final complexes were suspended in 2 μL of TEzero.


Four treatments of the four complexes were investigated: (1) No processing, amplification with ACA2 primer alone to determine raw capture efficiency; (2) No processing, amplification with AF and CR to determine unprocessed amplification and capture efficiency; (3) PreCR processing in 10 μL prior to AF and CR amplification to explore low volume processing; and (4) PreCR processing in 50 μL prior to AF and CR amplification to establish high volume processing effects.


PreCR processing was accomplished by adding the manufacturer's recommended solution that contained per 100 μL:

    • 82 μL of water
    • 10 μL of Thermopol buffer
    • 1 μL of 100×NAD+
    • 1 μL of 10 mM dNTPs
    • 2 μL of PreCR enzyme mix


Ten μL of PreCR cocktail was added to tube 3 and 50 μL was added to tube 4. These were incubated at 37 C for 20 min.


Following PreCR treatment, all four samples were resuspended to 50 μL by the addition of TEzero, and Q5 PCR cocktail with the appropriate PCR primers was added to a final volume of 250 μL. Each aliquot of PCR cocktail contained:

    • 125 μL water
    • 50 μL 5× Q5 reaction buffer
    • 25 μL of 10 uM primer (either ACA2 or a 1:1 blend of AF and CR)
    • 5 μL of 10 mM dNTPs
    • 2.5 μL of Q5 hot start enzyme


50 μL of each PCR reaction mix was aliquoted to a tube containing 1.25 L EvaGreen and 1 μL ROX dyes, mixed, and quadruplicate 10 μL aliquots were added to a qPCR optical PCR plate. The remaining 200 μL was split into to 100 μL aliquots. Both the qPCR and conventional PCR reaction were cycled as:

    • 98° C.-30 sec
    • 98° C.-10 sec, 69° C.-10 sec, 72° C.-10 sec for 40 cycles (qPCR) and plateau cycle (conventional).


The real-time PCR reaction was monitored to determine the optimal stopping point for the conventional PCR reactions. For the ACA2 reaction, the stopping point was at 21 cycles. For the remaining reactions, the stopping point was at 28 cycles. These qPCR reactions are further described in the Results section, infra.


Ten μL of raw PCR was collected for gel analysis and a remaining aliquot of 100 μL was purified 1:1 with beads. The purified PCR product was eluted with 50 μL TEzero and quantified by Qubit. The DNA yields were: (1) 7.44 ng/μL; (2) 10.6 ng/μL; (3) 12.1 ng/μL; and (4) 15.7 ng/μL.


qPCR Analysis of Capture/Processing:


A single Eco qPCR plate containing an array of eight assays—Assays 17-24 (Table 32) by six samples was used to assess capture efficiency. The six samples were:

    • 1. 10 ng/μL of original gDNA library
    • 2. NTC
    • 3. 0.01 ng/μL of sample 1
    • 4. 0.01 ng/μL of sample 2
    • 5. 0.01 ng/μL of sample 3
    • 6. 0.01 ng/μL of sample 4


The Q5 hot start assay mixture contained:

    • 237.5 μL H2O
    • 100 μL 5× Q5 reaction buffer
    • 10 μL dNTPs
    • 12.5 μL EvaGreen
    • 10 μL ROX
    • 5 μL Q5 hot start enzyme


This cocktail was distributed in 48 μL aliquots and 3 μL of Assay primer (10 uM in both F and R primer) was added. This was distributed in columns. Two μL of sample was added in rows and the plate was cycled as described above.


Results: Amplification of Complexes:


While the fluorescence profile of amplifying complexes is used primarily to identify the amplification plateau (which occurs much sooner for single primer than dual primer amplicons), the Cq value can be used to look at the content of amplicon between samples. In this experiment, the observed Cq values were:














Sample
Conditions
Cq







1
no PreCR, ACA2 single primer
15


2
no PreCR, AF + CR
21


3
10 μL PreCR, AF + CR
20


4
50 μL PreCR, AF + CR
19









These data demonstrated that PreCR treatment increased the abundance of P1+P2 (AF+CR) amplicons.


Gel images of the post-processing PCR products shown in FIG. 33 show that PreCR treatment supported the amplification of a larger size distribution of clones. The untreated, sample 2 amplicon is primarily a cluster of small size fragments. Sample 3 and to a greater extent sample 4 are more broadly distributed smears.


The qPCR results showing target enrichment are shown in Table 31 below. The raw sequence capture in sample 1 was surprisingly high. At least two factors may have contributed to such an unexpected improvement over historical data sets: (1) The core annealing process (pre-melt, higher temps, low salt binding to strep beads) has been optimized; and (2) A longer partner oligo (40 nt vs 35 nt) was used.


Even with no PreCR treatment, P1+P2 (AF+CR) amplifiable material was made (sample 2) and substantial enrichment of target signal over gDNA (and/or NTC) was observed.


PreCR treated complex also yielded enrichment levels comparable to unprocessed (sample 1) control. This is a fantastic demonstration of the fact that PreCR processing can stimulate the recombination of the probe-based partner oligo with the genomic library-based target clones. While the levels of enrichment are not remarkable, the majority of clone material is small and falls outside the range of the qPCR assay. As noted elsewhere herein, judicious bead enrichment can dramatically increase the proportion of the library that covers the qPCR site.


In addition, the results indicated that more PreCR is not necessarily better. Sample 3 (10 μL PreCR treatment) outperformed Sample 4 (50 μL PreCR treatment) with respect to enrichment specific activity in 6 of 8 assays.









TABLE 31





qPCR enrichment data for V3 experimental samples























Cqs
Assay 17
Assay 18
Assay 19
Assay 20
Assay 21
Assay 22
Assay 23
Assay 24





gDNA lib
24
21
21
22
22
22
22
22


NTC
35
31
34
26
33
N/A
30
29


sample 1
16
13
13
12
14
13
15
14


sample 2
21
18
19
16
18
18
22
20


sample 3
16
14
15
13
14
15
17
15


sample 4
16
14
15
13
15
15
17
15





Abs value
Assay 17
Assay 18
Assay 19
Assay 20
Assay 21
Assay 22
Assay 23
Assay 24





gDNA lib
5
40
36
32
20
22
34
29


NTC
0
0
0
1
0

0
0


sample 1
1918
14374
9372
20243
8444
10189
2820
8133


sample 2
59
382
172
1526
295
403
34
87


sample 3
1085
5090
3051
10275
5213
4144
1068
2822


sample 4
1492
5381
2751
8770
3866
2777
777
2233





Adj value
Assay 17
Assay 18
Assay 19
Assay 20
Assay 21
Assay 22
Assay 23
Assay 24





gDNA lib
5
40
36
32
20
22
34
29


NTC
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0


sample 1
1918016
14374082
9372333
20243011
8443797
10188837
2820166
8132920


sample 2
59292
381694
171590
1526000
295038
403467
33575
87344


sample 3
1085442
5089739
3050781
10275412
5212989
4143563
1068184
2821950


sample 4
1491501
5380882
2751029
8770152
3865764
2777330
777035
2232604


















Fold enrich
Assay 17
Assay 18
Assay 19
Assay 20
Assay 21
Assay 22
Assay 23
Assay 24





sample 1
378673
356798
262412
641805
415341
453405
84090
281573


sample 2
11706
9475
4804
48382
14513
17954
1001
3024


sample 3
214298
126339
85418
325782
256421
184389
31850
97700


sample 4
294466
133566
77025
278058
190152
123592
23169
77296









Discussion:


The capture and processing methods disclosed in this example performed well using untreated complexes. Without wishing to be bound to any particular theory, it is contemplated that one reason that the untreated complexes performed so well was because both the capture probe and genomic fragments possess primer binding sites.


Appendix to Example 19

The primer and amplicon designs for this example are shown below in Table 32.









TABLE 32







Sequences used to perform Example 19











SEQ






ID NO:
Target
Name
Sequence
% GC





603
SRY_r1,
F qPCR primer
CTGGTGCTCCATTCTTGAGTGTGT




Assay 17





604

R qPCR primer
GGACAACAGGTTGTACAGGGATGA





605

qPCR Amplicon
CTGGTGCTCCATTCTTGAGTGTGTGGCTTTCGTACAGT





CATCCCTGTACAACCTGTTGTCC





606

F-probe
CTGTAAGTTATCGTAAAAAGGAGCATCTAGGTAGGTCT
40%





TTGTAGCCAATGTTACCCGATT





607

R-probe
GAAGCAAACTGCAATTCTTCGGCAGCATCTTCGCCTTC
47%





CGACGAGGTCGATACTTATAAT





608

F-probe reverse
AATCGGGTAACATTGGCTACAAAGACCTACCTAGATGC




complement
TCCTTTTTACGATAACTTACAG





609

R-probe reverse
ATTATAAGTATCGACCTCGTCGGAAGGCGAAGATGCTG




complement
CCGAAGAATTGCAGTTTGCTTC





610
VHL_r3Assay
F qPCR primer
TACAGGAGACTGGACATCGTCAGG



18





611

R qPCR primer
CTTTCTGCACATTTGGGTGGTCTT





612

qPCR Amplicon
TACAGGAGACTGGACATCGTCAGGTCGCTCTACGAAGA





TCTGGAAGACCACCCAAATGTGCAGAAAG





613

F-probe
CTTGTTCGTTCCTTGTACTGAGACCCTAGTCTGCCACT
48%





GAGGATTTGGTTTTTGCCCTTC





614

R-probe
ATCAAGACTCATCAGTACCATCAAAAGCTGAGATGAAA
35%





CAGTGTAAGTTTCAACAGAAAT





615

F-probe reverse
GAAGGGCAAAAACCAAATCCTCAGTGGCAGACTAGGGT




complement
CTCAGTACAAGGAACGAACAAG





616

R-probe reverse
ATTTCTGTTGAAACTTACACTGTTTCATCTCAGCTTTT




complement
GATGGTACTGATGAGTCTTGAT





617
UGT1A1_r4,
F qPCR primer
GGTGATCAGATGGACAATGCAAAG



Assay 19





618

R qPCR primer
TCATTTCCAGAACATTCAGGGTCA





619

qPCR Amplicon
GGTGATCAGATGGACAATGCAAAGCGCATGGAGACTAA





GGGAGCTGGAGTGACCCTGAATGTTCTGGAAATGA





620

F-probe
TGTGTCCAGCTGTGAAACTCAGAGATGTAACTGCTGAC
45%





ATCCTCCCTATTTTGCATCTCA





621

R-probe
ATTTGAAACAATTTTATCATGAATGCCATGACCAAAGT
28%





ATTCTTCTGTATCTTCTTTCTT





622

F-probe reverse
TGAGATGCAAAATAGGGAGGATGTCAGCAGTTACATCT




complement
CTGAGTTTCACAGCTGGACACA





623

R-probe reverse
AAGAAAGAAGATACAGAAGAATACTTTGGTCATGGCAT




complement
TCATGATAAAATTGTTTCAAAT





624
TNFRSF14_r3,
F qPCR primer
ACCTCAATGGCCTAAGCAAGTGTC



Assay



20





625

R qPCR primer
GCCTCTTACCTGGGTCACACATTT





626

qPCR Amplicon
ACCTCAATGGCCTAAGCAAGTGTCTGCAGTGCCAAATG





TGTGACCCAGGTAAGAGGC





627

F-probe
TGATGGGTGGGCTCCCGAAGGGGCCTCCCGCAGACTTG
67%





CGAAGTTCCCACTCTCTGGGCG





628

R-probe
CAGGGTGCGGGGGCATCCAGGCTGCCCAAGCGGAGGCT
73%





GGGCCGGCTGTGCTGGCCTCTT





629

F-probe reverse
CGCCCAGAGAGTGGGAACTTCGCAAGTCTGCGGGAGGC




complement
CCCTTCGGGAGCCCACCCATCA





630

R-probe reverse
AAGAGGCCAGCACAGCCGGCCCAGCCTCCGCTTGGGCA




complement
GCCTGGATGCCCCCGCACCCTG





631
RUNX_r4,
F qPCR primer
ATCTTGCAACCTGGTTCTTCATGG



Assay 21





632

R qPCR primer
GCTGGCAATGATGAAAACTACTCG





633

qPCR Amplicon
AATCTTGCAACCTGGTTCTTCATGGCTGCGGTAGCATT





TCTCAGCTCAGCCGAGTAGTTTTCATCATTGCCAGC





634

F-probe
TTTTGAAATGTGGGTTTGTTGCCATGAAACGTGTTTCA
37%





AGCATAGTTTTGACAGATAACG





635

R-probe
TGCCCTAAAAGTGTATGTATAACATCCCTGATGTCTGC
40%





ATTTGTCCTTTGACTGGTGTTT





636

F-probe reverse
CGTTATCTGTCAAAACTATGCTTGAAACACGTTTCATG




complement
GCAACAAACCCACATTTCAAAA





637

R-probe reverse
AAACACCAGTCAAAGGACAAATGCAGACATCAGGGATG




complement
TTATACATACACTTTTAGGGCA





638
RHD_r5Assay
F qPCR primer
CCAAGTTTCAACTCTGCTCTGCTG



22





639

R qPCR primer
GTTGAACACGGCATTCTTCCTTTC





640

qPCR Amplicon
CCAAGTTTCAACTCTGCTCTGCTGAGAAGTCCAATCGA





AAGGAAGAATGCCGTGTTCAAC





641

F-probe
AACCCCTCGAGGCTCAGACCTTTGGAGCAGGAGTGTGA
58%





TTCTGGCCAACCACCCTCTCTG





642

R-probe
CATAAATATGTGTGCTAGTCCTGTTAGACCCAAGTGCT
55%





GCCCAAGGGCAGCGCCCTGCTC





643

F-probe reverse
CAGAGAGGGTGGTTGGCCAGAATCACACTCCTGCTCCA




complement
AAGGTCTGAGCCTCGAGGGGTT





644

R-probe reverse
GAGCAGGGCGCTGCCCTTGGGCAGCACTTGGGTCTAAC




complement
AGGACTAGCACACATATTTATG





645
PTEN_r5,
F qPCR primer
GGAAAGGGACGAACTGGTGTAATG



Assay 23





646

R qPCR primer
AAATCTAGGGCCTCTTGTGCCTTT





647

qPCR Amplicon
GGAAAGGGACGAACTGGTGTAATGATATGTGCATATTT





ATTACATCGGGGCAAATTTTTAAAGGCACAAGAGGCCC





TAGATTT





648

F-probe
TACTTGTTAATTAAAAATTCAAGAGTTTTTTTTTCTTA
22%





TTCTGAGGTTATCTTTTTACCA





649

R-probe
CCAAAATCTGTTTTCCAATAAATTCTCAGATCCAGGAA
33%





GAGGAAAGGAAAAACATCAAAA





650

F-probe reverse
TGGTAAAAAGATAACCTCAGAATAAGAAAAAAAAACTC




complement
TTGAATTTTTAATTAACAAGTA





651

R-probe reverse
TTTTGATGTTTTTCCTTTCCTCTTCCTGGATCTGAGAA




complement
TTTATTGGAAAACAGATTTTGG





652
EP300_r18,
F qPCR primer
AGCCCCATGGATCTTTCTACCATT



Assay 24





653

R qPCR primer
ATACTGCCAGGGCTCCTGATACTG





654

qPCR Amplicon
AGCCCCATGGATCTTTCTACCATTAAGAGGAAGTTAGA





CACTGGACAGTATCAGGAGCCCTGGCAGTAT





655

F-probe
ATACTCCATCTCCCGTAAAAATAGTGAGACTTGAGTAA
37%





TGTTTGATGTCACTTGTCTTTC





656

R-probe
CAGTCACCACTATATTATTCTAGGTATCCCAGAAAAGT
33%





TAAAGTCAAATCTGAAACACAT





657

F-probe reverse
GAAAGACAAGTGACATCAAACATTACTCAAGTCTCACT




complement
ATTTTTACGGGAGATGGAGTAT





658

R-probe reverse
ATGTGTTTCAGATTTGACTTTAACTTTTCTGGGATACC




complement
TAGAATAATATAGTGGTGACTG





659
Additional
Tail sequence for
GTGAAAACCAGGATCAACTCCCGTGCCAGTCACATCTC



oligos
capture probes
GT





660

Common partner
/5BioTEG/ACGAGATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATC




oligo sequence
CTGGTTTTCAC





661

Forward
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACGTCATGCAG




amplification
GACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA




primer AF





662

Reverse
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGTGACTGGCACGGG




amplification
AGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCAC




primer CR









Example 20: Library-Free Targeted Genomic Analysis

Summary:


This example demonstrates a library-free genomic analysis. The goals were to identify the most useful parameters for implementing such methods in a reliable, reproducible, low-cost, and high-throughput format. In particular, it was discovered that T4 polymerase can copy many and diverse genomic sequences provided it is supplemented with T4 gene 32 protein in the presence of PEG8000—a molecular crowding agent. In addition, it was found that suppression PCR just upstream of sequence library construction is a powerful method to enrich for long insert sequencing clones.


Background:


The molecular concepts behind library-free methods include:

    • (1) fragmenting gDNA to ˜400 bp or performing 1st strand cDNA synthesis with random 15-mers in the presence of ddNTPs (FIG. 33);
    • (2) melting the gDNA or cDNA with labeled capture probes and purify the end-repaired gDNA/cDNA. For gDNA, the genomic sequence is repaired with a sequence tag that comprises a random hexamer sequence contained within the tail portion (FIG. 33);
    • (3) processing the DNA complex in a single reaction at 20° C. The Buffer used is NEB CutSmart (NEB#4 and BSA), ATP, dNTPs, and PEG8000. The complex is processed with T4 DNA polymerase, T4 gene 32 protein (SB), and T4 DNA ligase. The adapter ligation strand is 5′ phosphorylated and the partner strand comprises a 3′ ddC. The opposite end of the adapter is staggered and can be blocked. A blunt configuration makes no self-dimer, is extremely efficiency and attaches the P1 containing ligation strand to the P2 containing target. (FIG. 34);
    • (4) PCR amplification to add flow cell compatible sequences and to introduce sample-specific index sequence to each reaction (FIG. 35); and
    • (5) DNA sequencing (FIG. 35).


One potential artifact that may occur in particular embodiments is associated with the abundance of unoccupied probes. The 3′ to 5′ exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase is capable of generating a blunt end on these molecules, which then becomes a substrate for ligation to the P1 adaptor sequence (FIG. 36). These short “oligo-dimer” products will, without intervention, overwhelm the subsequent PCR reaction. To circumvent the potential artifact, a suppressive PCR design was used, in which a 25 nt segment of P2 was included in the P1 adaptor. Following suppression PCR amplification with this segment, forward and reverse primers with P1 or P2-specific extensions are used to add the index sequence and the flow cell-compatible extensions.


The oligonucleotides that enable post-processing suppressive PCR, full-length amplification and sequencing are shown in the Table 33 below.












TABLE 33





SEQ ID





NO:
Name
Sequence
Description







663
LF_part
AGTTGATCCTGGTTATACA/3ddC/
Adaptor partner



strand

strand





664
LF_lig
/5Phos/GTGTATAACCAGGATCAACTCC
Adaptor ligation



strand
CGTGCCAGT
strand





665
LF_I1P
GTGAAAACCAGGATCAACTCCCGTGCCAG
Index 1 sequencing




TCAC
primer





666
LF_FSP
GTCATGCAGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTATACA
Library-free Forward




C
sequencing primer





667
LF_Single
ACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTT
Post-processing



primer

amplification primer



sequence





668
LF_FLFP
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACAC
Library-free forward




GTCATGCAGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTATACA
amplification primer




C





669
LF_FLRP_N701
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATTCGCC
Index N701 reverse




TTAGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGG
primer




TTTTCAC





670
LF_FLRP_N702
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATCTAGT
Index N702 reverse




ACGGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGG
primer




TTTTCAC





671
LF_FLRP_N703
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATTTCTG
Index N703 reverse




CCTGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGG
primer




TTTTCAC





672
LF_FLRP_N704
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGCTCA
Index N704 reverse




GGAGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGG
primer




TTTTCAC









Materials:


Genomic DNA samples were collected from 4 subjects and purified using the Oragene saliva collection kit. The samples that were sequenced in this study were:












Genomic DNA samples and Illumina Indexes used in this study









Coriel




ID #
Sample description
Illumina Index ID





NA19240
Yoruba female
Index N701 reverse




primer


GM03623
Aneuploid XXX and chr18 trisomy
Index N702 reverse




primer


GM11226
XXXX
Index N703 reverse




primer


GM18917
Yoruban/Nigerian - harbors deletion
Index N704 reverse



variants 1, 2, 4, 9
primer









The probes used in these experiments are provided in Table 34 below. Hexamer tags are required to establish independent capture events with the same sequencing start site from sibling clones that arise during post-capture amplification.











TABLE 34





SEQ ID




NO:
Name
Sequence







673
CYP2D6_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAGC




ACCTAGCCCCATTCCTGCTGAGCAGGAGGTGGCAGGTACCCCAGA




CTGGGAGGTAA





674
CYP2D6_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGTC




GGTGGGGCCAGGATGAGGCCCAGTCTGTTCACACATGGCTGCTGC




CTCTCAGCTCT





675
AMY1_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNACCT




GAGTAGCATCATTGTAGTTCTCGATATCTCCACTTCCAGTTTTAC




ATTTACCATCA





676
chrX_15_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCTG




GCCCTCAGCCAGTACAGAAAGTCATTTGTCAAGGCCTTCAGTTGG




CAGACGTGCTC





677
chrX_15_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGAA




TTCATTGCCAGCTATAAATCTGTGGAAACGCTGCCACACAATCTT




AGCACACAAGA





678
chrX_477_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGACT




TCAAAGAAATTACAAGTTGACATCTTGGACTCTACCCCTCGTACT




TTATCTCCTAT





679
chrX_477_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTCTC




TTTGGGGTCAAGAAAGAATCCCTAGTGGATTTGGGATTCTAGAGG




AGGTGTTATAA





680
chrX_478_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTGCG




ATACCATGCTGAAGATGAGCTAACCCAACCAGCCAAGCAGGCAGG




GCTGCGAAGGA





681
chrX_478_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGGGG




TAGGTGGAAAACCCAAGTAATGTGATTTTGTAACATCCACTGCTG




CATTTGTTTGC





682
chrX_69_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTTAC




TTCCCTCCAGTTTTGTTGCTTGCAAAACAACAGAATCTTCTCTCC




ATGAAATCATG





683
chrX_69_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGG




GGTATCTATTATCCCCATTTTCTCACAAAGGAAACCAAGATAAAA




GGTTTAAATGG





684
PLP1_ex1_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAA




TTCTCTTGTGAATTCCTGTGTCCTCTTGAATCTTCAATGCTAAAG




TTTTTGAAACT





685
PLP1_ex2_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGGGT




TTGAGTGGCATGAGCTACCTACTGGATGTGCCTGACTGTTTCCCC




TTCTTCTTCCC





686
PLP1_ex2_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTAT




CTCCAGGATGGAGAGAGGGAAAAAAAAGATGGGTCTGTGTGGGAG




GGCAGGTACTT





687
PLP1_ex3_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAA




GAAGCCAGGTCTTCAATTAATAAGATTCCCTGGTCTCGTTTGTCT




ACCTGTTAATG





688
PLP1_ex3_M
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGA




CTCGCGCCCAATTTTCCCCCACCCCTTGTTATTGCCACAAAATCC




TGAGGATGATC





689
PLP1_ex3_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTCTT




TCTTCTTCCTTTATGGGGCCCTCCTGCTGGCTGAGGGCTTCTACA




CCACCGGCGCA





690
PLP1_ex4_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGTTT




GTGTTTCTACATCTGCAGGCTGATGCTGATTTCTAACCACCCCAT




GTCAATCATTT





691
PLP1_ex4_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAACC




AAATATATAGTGCTTCCATAGTGGGTAGGAGAGCCAAAGCACCCG




TACCCTAACTC





692
PLP1_ex5_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGTC




TCCATGTGGCCCCGTAACTCCATAAAGCTTACCCTGCTTGCTTTT




TGTGTCTTACT





693
PLP1_ex5_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCAT




GGGTGTAATTTGTATGGTATTAGCTACTCCCTTGTAAAATAACCC




AAATAACCCAC





694
PLP1_ex6_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTTTA




CAGTGGAGCATATTACTGCTGTTGCAAGAAACAGTTCTTCCTCTT




TCATTTTCCTG





695
PLP1_ex6_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATAG




CTGTACCCACACTATCTCAGGCCTATTTACTTGCCAAGATCATTC




AAAGTCAACTC





696
PLP1_ex7_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGATT




TGAGGAGGGAGTGCTTTCTTTTCTACTCTCATTCACATTCTCTCT




TCTGTTCCCTA





697
PLP1_ex7_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGC




ATTGTAGGCTGTGTGGTTAGAGCCTCGCTATTAGAGAAAGGGGGA




TTTCTACGGGG





698
KRAS_ex1_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTGTT




ACCTTTAAAAGACATCTGCTTTCTGCCAAAATTAATGTGCTGAAC




TTAAACTTACC





699
KRAS_ex1_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTTCC




CAGTAAATTACTCTTACCAATGCAACAGACTTTAAAGAAGTTGTG




TTTTACAATGC





700
KRAS_ex2_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTAAA




TGACATAACAGTTATGATTTTGCAGAAAACAGATCTGTATTTATT




TCAGTGTTACT





701
KRAS_ex2_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGACA




GGTTTTGAAAGATATTTGTGTTACTAATGACTGTGCTATAACTTT




TTTTTCTTTCC





702
KRAS_ex3_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNACTC




AAAAAATAAAAACTATAATTACTCCTTAATGTCAGCTTATTATAT




TCAATTTAAAC





703
KRAS_ex3_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAACA




CCTTTTTTGAAGTAAAAGGTGCACTGTAATAATCCAGACTGTGTT




TCTCCCTTCTC





704
KRAS_ex4_F
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAA




CCTTTATCTGTATCAAAGAATGGTCCTGCACCAGTAATATGCATA




TTAAAACAAGA





705
KRAS_ex4_R
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGTGT




ATTAACCTTATGTGTGACATGTTCTAATATAGTCACATTTTCATT




ATTTTTATTAT





706
MYC_r1_F1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCCC




AGCCAGCGGTCCGCAACCCTTGCCGCATCCACGAAACTTTGCCCA




TAGCAGCGGGC





707
MYC_r1_R1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNcgac




tcatctcagcattaaagtgataaaaaaataaattaaaaggcaagt




ggacttcggtg





708
MYC_r2_F1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNctgt




ggcgcgcactgcgcgctgcgccaggtttccgcaccaagacccctt




taactcaagac





709
MYC_r2_F2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTTCT




ACTGCGACGAGGAGGAGAACTTCTACCAGCAGCAGCAGCAGAGCG




AGCTGCAGCCC





710
MYC_r2_F3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNACCG




AGCTGCTGGGAGGAGACATGGTGAACCAGAGTTTCATCTGCGACC




CGGACGACGAG





711
MYC_r2_F4
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCCG




CCGCCTCAGAGTGCATCGACCCCTCGGTGGTCTTCCCCTACCCTC




TCAACGACAGC





712
MYC_r2_R1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGGCG




GCTAGGGGACAGGGGCGGGGTGGGCAGCAGCTCGAATTTCTTCCA




GATATCCTCGC





713
MYC_r2_R2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGAC




GAGCTTGGCGGCGGCCGAGAAGCCGCTCCACATACAGTCCTGGAT




GATGATGTTTT





714
MYC_r2_R3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGGA




GAGCAGAGAATCCGAGGACGGAGAGAAGGCGCTGGAGTCTTGCGA




GGCGCAGGACT





715
MYC_r2_R4
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNtaag




agtggcccgttaaataagctgccaatgaaaatgggaaaggtatcc




agccgcccact





716
MYC_r3_F1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNttgt




atttgtacagcattaatctggtaattgattattttaatgtaacct




tgctaaaggag





717
MYC_r3_F2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAGG




CCACAGCAAACCTCCTCACAGCCCACTGGTCCTCAAGAGGTGCCA




CGTCTCCACAC





718
MYC_r3_F3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGAG




GAGGAACGAGCTAAAACGGAGCTTTTTTGCCCTGCGTGACCAGAT




CCCGGAGTTGG





719
MYC_r3_R1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTCCA




ACTTGACCCTCTTGGCAGCAGGATAGTCCTTCCGAGTGGAGGGAG




GCGCTGCGTAG





720
MYC_r3_R2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCTT




GGACGGACAGGATGTATGCTGTGGCTTTTTTAAGGATAACTACCT




TGGGGGCCTTT





721
MYC_r3_R3
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCAT




TTGATCATGCATTTGAAACAAGTTCATAGGTGATTGCTCAGGACA




TTTCTGTTAGA









Methods, Results and Discussion: Part I.


Four gDNAs (F, S, C and L) were diluted to 20 ng/μL in 150 μL final volume. The samples were sonicated to 500 bp and 125 L was purified with 125 μL of beads. The starting material and purified, fragmented gDNA are shown in FIG. 37. The concentrations of gDNA were: (1) F—137 ng/μL; (2) S—129 ng/μL; (3) C—153 ng/μL; and (4) L—124 ng/μL.


For capture, 10 μL of gDNA sample was heated to 98° C. for 2 min (to achieve strand dissociation) and cooled on ice. 5 μL of 4× bind and 5 μL of the 49 probe pool (SEQ ID NOs: 150-198) (1 nM in each probe combined with 50 nM universal oligo 61, were added and the mix was annealed (98° C. 2 min followed by 4 min incubations at successive 1° C. lower temperatures down to 69° C.). The complexes were bound to 2 μL of MyOne strep beads that were suspended in 180 μL TEzero (total volume 200 μL) for 30 min, washed four times, 5 min each with 25% formamide wash, washed once with TEzero, and the supernatants were withdrawn from the bead complexes.


For processing and adaptor ligation, 100 μL of T4 mix was made that contained: 60 μL water; 10 μL NEB “CutSmart” buffer; 15 μL 50% PEG8000; 10 μL 10 mM ATP; 1 μL 1 mM dNTP blend; 1 μL T4 gene 32 protein (NEB); and 0.5 μL T4 DNA polymerase (NEB). 25 μL of mix was added to each of the four samples and incubated at 20° C. for 15 min followed by a 70° C. incubation for 10 min to heat inactivate the T4 polymerase. Following the inactivation step, 1.25 μL of adaptor (10 μM) and 1.25 μL of HC T4 DNA ligase were added. This mixture was further incubated at 22° C. for 30 min and 65° C. for 10 min.


One attractive feature of the library free methods is that processed complexes are still attached to beads. Beads were pulled from the ligation buffer and washed once with 200 μL of TEzero. The complexes were then resuspended in 2 μL. For amplification, single primer amplification in a 20 μL volume was used to both amplify target fragments and to enrich for long genomic fragments over probe “stubs”. Following the amplification, a larger volume PCR reaction with full length primers were used to create a “sequence-ready” library.


A Q5-based single primer PCR amplification buffer was made by combining 57 μL water, 20 μL 5× Q5 reaction buffer, 10 μL of single primer 117 (see Table 33), 2 μL of 10 mM dNTPs, and 1 μL of Q5 hot start polymerase. Eighteen μL was added to each tube followed by amplification for 20 cycles (98° C.-30 sec; 98° C.-10 sec, 69° C.-10 sec, 72° C.-10 sec for 20 cycles; 10° C. hold). Following the PCR, the beads were pulled out and the L of pre-amp supernatant was transferred to 280 μL of PCR mix that contained 163.5 μL water, 60 μL 5× Q5 buffer, 15 μL of forward primer 118 (10 uM), 15 uM of reverse primer 119 (10 uM), 6 μL of 10 mM dNTPs, 13.5 μL of EvaGreen+ROX dye blend (1.25 parts EG to 1 part ROX), and 3 μL of Q5 hot start polymerase (adding the dye to all reactions was unintended). Two 100 μL aliquots were amplified by conventional PCR (98° C.-10 sec, 69° C.-10 sec, 72° C.-10 sec) and quadruplicate ten μL aliquots were amplified under qPCR conditions. FIG. 38 shows the amplification plot that was observed for all four samples. The reaction seems to go through an inflection/plateau reminiscent of PCR and the conventional reactions were stopped at 20 cycles (now 40 total cycles of PCR). FIG. 39 shows a 2% agarose gel containing the products of these amplification reactions. FIG. 40 shows a 2% agarose gel containing the amplification products following bead purification.


The library-free samples were assayed to determine if gene specific targets were captured and selectively amplified using the well-validated qPCR capture assays described elsewhere herein. The target regions for Assays 1-16 are shown in Table 35.









TABLE 35







Target regions for assays 1-16.










Assay
Sequence







Assay 1
PLP1 exon 2



Assay 2
PLP1 exon 2



Assay 3
PLP1 exon 2



Assay 4
PLP1 upstream of exon 2



Assay 5
PLP1 downstream of exon 2



Assay 6
PLP1 200 bp downstream of exon 2



Assay 7
PLP1 exon 3



Assay 8
Chr 9, off target



Assay 9
CYP2D6



Assay 10
Chr X: 154376051



Assay 11
Chr X: 154376051



Assay 12
Chr X: 6929264



Assay 13
KRAS Region 1



Assay 14
KRAS Region 2



Assay 15
Myc Region 2



Assay 16
Myc Region 2










For qPCR analysis, genomic DNA from sample F at 10 ng/μL (2 μL is added to 8 μL of PCR mix to give a final volume and concentration of 10 μL and 2 ng/μL, respectively) was used as control. Purified processed material from the F and S samples was diluted to 0.01 ng/μL=10 pg/μL and 2 μL was added to each 8 μL PCR reaction to give a final concentration of 2 pg/μL. The results are shown in Table 36.









TABLE 36





qPCR Results























Cqs
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





gDNA
23
22
25
22
22
23
23
19


F-lib
13
13
13
13
13
20
12
35


S-lib
14
14
13
13
14
20
13
N/A



















Assay 9
Assay 10
Assay 11
Assay 12
Assay 13
Assay 14
Assay 15
Assay 16





gDNA
21
21
22
22
22
21
21
21


F-lib
11
13
13
16
18
17
14
13


S-lib
11
13
14
17
17
16
13
12


















Abs
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





gDNA
16
24
4
17
22
15
8
146


F-lib
12150
13296
8874
16739
13738
79
22495
0


S-lib
6142
7704
10410
10093
6425
132
14648



















Assay 9
Assay 10
Assay 11
Assay 12
Assay 13
Assay 14
Assay 15
Assay 16





gDNA
60
39
18
30
17
43
49
37


F-lib
45447
11671
11034
1288
440
853
6373
16448


S-lib
68935
12477
7634
678
1077
1203
10171
19305


















Adj
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





gDNA
16
24
4
17
22
15
8
146


F-lib
12150333
13296288
8874203
16739230
13737864
79482
22495321
2


S-lib
6141637
7703565
10410406
10093396
6424647
131876
14648060
0



















Assay 9
Assay 10
Assay 11
Assay 12
Assay 13
Assay 14
Assay 15
Assay 16





gDNA
60
39
18
30
17
43
49
37


F-lib
45447322
11670722
11034289
1288163
440236
852919
6373326
16447972


S-lib
68934509
12476684
7634492
677562
1077493
1203428
10170993
19304903


















Adj
Assay 1
Assay 2
Assay 3
Assay 4
Assay 5
Assay 6
Assay 7
Assay 8





F-lib
778820
562525
2393851
987542
627702
5247
2657954
0


S-lib
393671
325914
2808248
595466
293551
8706
1730754
0



















Assay 9
Assay 10
Assay 11
Assay 12
Assay 13
Assay 14
Assay 15
Assay 16





F-lib
757399
300823
627284
42799
25665
19716
130461
439562


S-lib
1148823
321597
434010
22512
62817
27819
208198
515912









The qPCR data indicated that the library-free technology is very effective at retrieving the targeted genomic regions and at leaving off-target regions behind (e.g., Assays 6, 8). The fold purifications, often >500,000-fold, were directly comparable to data from earlier experiments generated with libraries as disclosed elsewhere herein.


Methods, Results and Discussion: Part II Leave-One-Out Analysis:


The enzymatic requirements for complex processing were evaluated: the design of experiment is shown in FIG. 54.


To make capture complexes for analysis, twelve identical reactions were created. Ten μL of 135 ng/μL sonicated gDNA was melted, annealed with a tagged, bound to streptavidin coated beads, washed and resuspended in TEzero as described supra. Five hundred L of processing master mix was prepared by combining 270 μL water, 50 μL 10× CutSmart buffer, 50 μL of 10 mM ATP, 75 μL of 50% PEG8000, and 5 μL of 10 mM dNTPs. This buffer was divided into 10 90 μL aliquots (duplicate tests were performed) and enzyme was added in the amounts described above (per 90 μL of master mix was added 1 μL of T4 gene 32 protein, 0.5 μL of T4 polymerase, 5 μL of adaptor and/or 5 μL of HC T4 ligase). Following T4 fill-in and ligation as described supra, the complexes were washed free of processing mix in TEzero and resuspended in 2 μL TEzero. Complexes were resuspended in 20 μL final volume each of single primer amplification mix and amplified for 20 cycles as described supra. The beads were then pulled aside using a magnet and the 20 μL clarified amplification was diluted into 180 μL of full-length F+R (118+119) PCR amplification mix. Fifty μL was pulled aside for qPCR analysis and the remaining 150 μL was split in two and amplified by conventional PCR. The 50 μL qPCR samples were mixed with 2.5 μL of dye blend and 10 μL aliquots were monitored by fluorescence change. The traces of this experiment are shown in FIG. 41.


One of the two conventional PCR aliquots was pulled at 10 cycles and the other at 16 cycles of PCR. Aliquots of these raw PCR reactions (5 μL of each reaction) were analyzed on 2% agarose gels. The results are shown in FIG. 42. The surprising result is that all three enzymes are required for the efficient production of amplifiable library material. A more subtle observation is that the size distribution of all-three-enzyme-material at 10 cycles is significantly larger than the size distribution of P+L alone that appears at 16 cycles.


These data together with the qPCR from the initial investigation support the interpretation that T4 DNA polymerase in conjunction with T4 gene 32 protein in the presence of the molecular crowding agent PEG8000 (the latter contribution has not been evaluated) is capable of efficiently copying captured genomic material onto capture probes.


Methods, Results and Discussion: Part III—Generation of a Library-Free Sequencing Library:


The methods described above were used to produce a DNA sequencing library with the four Coriel samples shown in the “Materials” section of this report. Each one of the four samples was coded with an individual index code in the final PCR step. The final library constituents (shown separately prior to pooling) are shown in the gel image in FIG. 43. The “normal” library smear usually stretches from 175 bp upward. Here, the smallest fragments are >300 bp. Similarly, the largest fragments appear to be 750 bp or larger. Larger fragments do not give rise to optimal libraries. These samples were all twice purified on 80% bead:sample ratios. These samples were pooled into a 16.9 ng/μL pool that, with an estimated average insert size of 400 bp, is ˜65 nM. The samples were sequenced.


The library-free methods worked well for CNV analyses. Unique read counts for the X-linked genePLP1 were normalized to the autosomal loci KRAS and MYC and the plot of these data is shown in FIG. 44. The data illustrate that absolute copy number is lost with the library-free procedure (the “copies” of KRAS relative to MYC are no longer comparable). However, relative copy number (the change of PLP1 relative to the autosomal normalizers) is robustly detected. The sequencing results also showed striking features related to read start sites relative to probe. FIG. 45 shows that reads are detected as far as 900 bp from the probe; and between coordinates 1100 and 1300 every single start point is used multiple times. These data indicated that reads start at every single possible base position and that there is little ligation/processing bias. In addition, there are very few reads that start within 100 bp of the probe, consistent with the very large size distribution of the library that was observed on gels.


Example 21: Targeted Gene Expression Analysis

Overview:


This example demonstrates the development of targeted gene expression libraries. The input is RNA, not DNA, and therefore double-strand cDNA synthesis step is required. A preferred method is 1st strand synthesis using an RNAse H reverse transcriptase or a kit that exhibits RNAse H-like activity (e.g., Promega's GoScript) and priming with random hexamers. A preferred method for 2nd strand synthesis is to use a kit that includes E. coli DNA polymerase holoenzyme, NAD+-dependent ligase and RNAse H (e.g., New England Biolabs 2nd strand cDNA synthesis module).


Because there is a very wide range of transcript copies, there must be a correspondingly wide range of random tags that are introduced on adaptors to sheared and end-repaired cDNA. Accordingly, random 8-mers (65,536 possible sequences) were used. The adaptor was engineered with a random 8-mer sequence followed by 10-12 fixed bases that can both serve as an annealing site for a complementary 10-12 that facilitates ligation and that is used as a sample identifier in the case of multiplexed samples.


The actual number of unique versus duplicated reads—in other words the statistical distribution of reads—is one important factor in determining expression levels. One potential source of error are reads that are duplicated after the capture event. To identify these errors, a random tag was added to the capture probe such that each capture event is labeled.


The treatment and sequencing of targeted RNA-seq libraries follows the same procedure as treatment of genomic libraries.


The informatics analysis starts with the removal of post-capture duplicate reads and alignment to the target transcriptome. The unique read counts among aligning reads are then determined. While the data can then be fit to a statistical distribution, it was found that the raw unique read counts are a very close approximation to actual expression levels.


Purpose:


The purpose of these experiments was to make targeted expression sequencing libraries from heart and liver total RNAs and to make both total RNA and targeted RNA libraries from the same starting material a direct comparison could be made.


Summary:


The RNA counts from total RNA libraries and from targeted RNA libraries showed good agreement along two parameters. First, the expression ratios between heart vs liver samples were well correlated. Second, the measurement of absolute abundance of different transcripts within a given sample was in good agreement when total RNA counts were compared to targeted RNA counts. These first-pass data indicated that quantitative targeted nucleic acid methods can be extended beyond genomic DNA into the analysis of cDNA libraries.


Strategy:


To create a reasonable total RNA library that is depleted of rRNA, dT priming was used. To create targeted RNA libraries, total RNA samples were initially primed with IDT-supplied random hexamers. Random hexamer priming likely provides the most comprehensive coverage of the transcriptome. The total RNA libraries were sequenced after amplification with PCR primers that introduce P1 and P2 flow cell sequences. For targeted analysis, the capture, washing, processing and amplification steps were performed as contemplated elsewhere herein. The targeted clones were then sequenced.


Methods

Oligonucleotides:


For total RNA libraries the poly-dT primer: TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTVN (SEQ ID NO: 722) was used. For targeted RNA-seq, an adaptor design was created in which the first 8 bases were random and the next 12 served as a “code” and an anchor sequence for a 12 mer partner strand oligo that could therefore form a ligatable duplex. The sequences of these adaptors were:














SEQ ID




NO:
Name
Sequence







723
RNA_L_1
TGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACANNNNNNNNGA




CTCCGATCCC





724
RNA_P_1
GGGATCGGAGTC





725
RNA_L_2
TGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACANNNNNNNNCG




GAACTCGGAG





726
RNA_P_2
CTCCGAGTTCCG









cDNA Library Construction:


The following methods were used to synthesize the four following cDNA libraries: (1) Heart total RNA (dT primed); (2) Heart targeted RNA (N6 primed); (3) Liver total RNA; and (4) Liver targeted RNA (N6 primed). One g/L total RNA was diluted 10-fold to 100 ng/μL in TEz. The following components were combined in a total volume of 10 μL, heated to 65° C. and transferred to ice: 2 μL of diluted total RNA (100 ng); 2 μL of 5 uM poly-dTVN primer or 2 μL of 50 uM N6 (IDT); and 6 μL of water.


The mix was combined with 10 μL of 1st strand cocktail (4 μL 5× GoScript buffer; 1.6 μL 25 mM Mg++ (2 mM final concentration); 1.0 μL 10 mM dNTPs (500 uM final concentration); 1.0 μL GoScript enzyme; and 2.4 μL water) and incubated at 42° C. for 30 min, then 70° C. for 10 min. Sixty microliters of 2nd strand synthesis reagents (48 μL water, mix; 8 μL 10× second strand synthesis buffer; 4 μL second strand enzyme mix) were added to each reaction and incubated at 16° C. for 2 hours.


Following the second strand synthesis 55 μL TEz was added to each reaction and reactions were transferred to glass Covaris sonication tubes and sonicated to about 500 bp. 125 μL of the sonicated sample was transferred to a PCR strip tube and 125 μL beads were added. Following purification, the sample was resuspended to a final volume of 20 μL.


End repair was carried out for 19 μL of the reaction using the methods contemplated herein. The end repaired fragments were then ligated to adaptors at 22° C. for 30 min and heat inactivated at 65° C. for 10 min. Ligation was carried out in a 40 μL final volume: L of repaired fragments; 2 μL of 10 uM adaptor (10 uM in L strand, 20 uM in P strand); 4 L 10× buffer; 6 μL 50% PEG8000; 1 μL water; and 2 μL HC T4 ligase. 60 μL TEz and 100 μL beads were added to each reaction and the sample was purified to a final volume of 20 μL.


Library amplification was monitored using qPCR and each library was amplified by PCR by combining 20 μL of purified ligation mix with 130 μL PCR mix (75 μL 2× NEBNext master mix, 15 μL ACA2-20, 40 μL water). 50 μL was aliquoted into a well that contains 2.5 μL EvaGreen+ROX and further aliquoted to 10 μL in qPCR plate. The remaining 100 μL was kept in PCR strip tube. The PCR amplification was carried out at 72° C.-30 sec, 98° C.-30 sec, and variable cycles of 98° C.-10 sec, 60° C.-10 sec, 72° C.-10 sec.


For dT libraries, 100 μL PCR reactions were purified with 120 μL beads. ACA2-20 (a 20 nt PCR primer) amplified material was diluted 20-fold—5 μL into 95 μL of PCR mix—that contains 50 μL 2×NEBNext master mix, 5 μL of F primer, 5 μL of R-primer and 35 μL of water. The F primer is oligo #8, ACA2_FLFP AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACGTCATGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATA CA (SEQ ID NO: 69) and the reverse primer is oligo #63, exome CAC3_FLRP CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATGTGACTGGCACGGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATAC A (SEQ ID NO: 74). Amplification was carried out for 8 cycles. This step was included to grow the shorter, 20 bp ACA2 terminal sequences into longer P1 and P2, flow cell-compatible and sequencable sequences. Constructs that pick up the two different primers will amplify while those that have only one sequence will be suppressed. The resulting DNA was purified by adding 100 μL beads to the 100 μL PCR rxn and resuspended in a final volume of 50 μL.


DNA was quantified by Qubit and examined by gel electrophoresis. The DNA was sequenced using the forward primer oligo #7, ACA2_FSP ACACGTCATGCAGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA (SEQ ID NO: 68) and the reverse primer oligo #62, exome CAC3_RSP GTGACTGGCACGGGACCAGAGAATTCGAATACA (SEQ ID NO: 73). dT-primed RNA was sequenced in runs_48 & 49.


The DNA gel of samples is shown in FIG. 46. The large fragment size distribution of dT-primed total RNA libraries was somewhat surprising.


For targeted RNA sequencing, Ns-primed libraries were resuspended in 40 L of TEz. Fragment content in heart and liver libraries was quantified: 153 fg/μL of heart sample cDNA and 760 fg/μL of liver sample cDNA. Based on these data, 40 μL of the heart ligation sample and 8 μL of the liver ligation sample were carried into downstream PCR amplification.


Progress of library amplification was monitored using qPCR and the library was amplified by PCR combining 40 μL of purified ligation mix (heart) or 8 μL of ligation mix+32 μL of TEz (liver) with 210 μL PCR mix (125 μL 2×NEB Next master mix, 25 L ACA2, 60 μL water). 50 μL was aliquoted into a well that contains 2.5 μL EvaGreen+ROX and further aliquoted into 10 μL aliquots in a qPCR plate. The remaining 100 μL was placed in a PCR strip tube. The PCR amplification was carried out at 72° C.-30 sec, 98° C.-30 sec, and variable cycles of 98° C.-10 sec, 60° C.-10 sec, 72° C.-10 sec. 200 μL of PCR products were purified with 200 μL beads and resuspended in a final volume of 25 μL. The concentration of PCR products was 41 ng/μL for the heart library and 42 ng/μL for the liver library.


For capture, heart and liver samples were combined and two of “2×” capture reactions were performed with tagged RNA-seq-specific probes (see Appendix, infra for sequences), washed, processed C+P (final yield=40 μL of 23 ng/μL), and size selected 240-600 bp fragments on a Pippin automated DNA size selector. 5.4 ng/μL of fragments were recovered from the Pippin=20.8 nM. A flow cell was loaded with the fragments and 51 nt first reads and 24 nt second reads were collected.


Results and Discussion:


To determine useful RNA-seq data, a heart versus liver sample was chosen for comparison. 21 transcripts were parsed out of transcripts reported in the RNA-seq Atlas (medicalgenomics.org/rna_seq_atlas) based on their absolute abundance in one or the other tissue (RPKM values of about 100, 10, 1 etc. in heart or liver) and on their ratios between tissues (again about 100, 10, 1, 0.1, 0.01 for heart vs liver ratios). The list of candidate transcripts and their reported RPKM values are shown in FIG. 55.


The targeted RNA-seq library was compared to an untargeted, total RNA library made from the same total RNA sample. Poly dT priming was used to convert total RNA, which is primarily rRNA, into non-rRNA transcript libraries. For targeted RNA-seq, random hexamers were used. For the dT primed total RNA libraries, reads can be derived along the entire length of a transcript, some of which are quite long. As an example, the distribution of reads along MYH7 in heart was examined and reads derived from near the 5′ end of this long transcript were found. To compare one (long) transcript to another (short) transcript, counts were normalized by transcript length (often referred to as the reads per million per Kb or RPKM method). Following this 1st degree normalization, counts were also normalize between total and targeted samples. The final read count data set is shown in FIG. 56.


Visual inspection revealed a good correlation between all three types of data (Atlas, Total and Targeted). One important comparison was between that total RNA-seq sample prepared herein and the targeted RNA-seq sample prepared herein, because both data sets were derived from the same total RNA samples. Two important points of comparison include: (1) The correlation of the actual heart versus liver expression ratio; and (2) the correlation of the absolute abundances of transcripts within a specific sample between total and targeted counts.


The first point addresses the preservation of expression profiles, but ignores the actual magnitude of counts being compared. An expression ratio heart versus liver comparison plot for total versus targeted expression ratios is shown in FIG. 47. This plot shows an exceptional correlation (r2=0.95) between “expression profiles” generated by the two methods.


The second point can be more rigorous because it asks for an absolute comparison between the two methods. A comparison of absolute expression levels as measured in total RNA-seq or targeted RNA-seq is shown in FIG. 48, where log 10(count) values are plotted against one another. This comparison was sensitive not only to targeting, but also to the fact that the RNA-seq libraries were prepared by fundamentally different methods (dT priming for total, random hexamer priming for targeted). Despite the different methods of preparation there was an excellent correlation between the two methods.


This study demonstrated that the core methods of labeling with random tags combined with sequence-specific capture can produce target-specific RNA transcript data that preserves absolute expression abundance, reveals transcript-specific sequence information, and dramatically reduces the complexity of transcriptome data.









APPENDIX







PROBE SEQUENCES USED FOR RNA-SEQ ANALYSIS.









SEQ




ID


NO:
Name
Sequence





727
APOB_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCCGAAGAGGAAA




TGCTGGAAAATGTCAGCCTGGTCTGTCCAAAAGATGCGACCCGATTC





728
APOB_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGCTGACCTCAT




CGAGATTGGCTTGGAAGGAAAAGGCTTTGAGCCAACATTGGAAGCT





729
ATP5E_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTACTGGAGACAGG




CTGGACTCAGCTACATCCGATACTCCCAGATCTGTGCAAAAGCAGTG





730
ATP5E_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTGAAGACAGAAT




TCAAAGCAAATGCTGAGAAGACTTCTGGCAGCAACGTAAAAATTGTG





731
BVES_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNACAGAGTCCAGCC




CATTGAGAGAATCAACTGCCATAGGTTTTACACCTGAGTTAGAAAGT





732
BVES_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGCCAGCTCCAGT




GACAGTGACGACGGCTTGCACCAGTTTCTTCGGGGTACCTCCAGCA





733
DKK3_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGACACGCAGCACA




AATTGCGCAGCGCGGTGGAAGAGATGGAGGCAGAAGAAGCTGCTGC





734
DKK3_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTGGTGTATGTGTG




CAAGCCGACCTTCGTGGGGAGCCGTGACCAAGATGGGGAGATCCTG





735
FGA_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATGAGGATCGTCT




GCCTGGTCCTAAGTGTGGTGGGCACAGCATGGACTGCAGATAGTGGT





736
FGA_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATTTTTTCTGTTT




ATTGCGATCAAGAGACCAGTTTGGGAGGATGGCTTTTGATCCAGCA





737
FGL1_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGTGTTCAGTTTCA




TCCTTGTTACCACCGCTCTGACAATGGGCAGGGAAATTTCGGCGCTC





738
FGL1_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTGCAAACCTGAAT




GGTGTATACTACAGCGGCCCCTACACGGCTAAAACAGACAATGGGA





739
HAND2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCATCCCCAACGTA




CCCGCCGACACCAAACTCTCCAAAATCAAGACCCTGCGCCTGGCCA





740
HAND2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCGACCAGAATGGC




GAGGCGGAGGCCTTCAAGGCAGAGATCAAGAAGACCGACGTGAAAG





741
MGP_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTGATCCTTCTTG




CCATCCTGGCCGCCTTAGCGGTAGTAACTTTGTGTTATGAATCACAT





742
MGP_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCGAGCTCAATAGG




GAAGCCTGTGATGACTACAGACTTTGCGAACGCTACGCCATGGTTT





743
MGST1_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAGAAGTATCTTC




GAACAGATGACAGAGTAGAACGTGTACGCAGAGCCCACCTGAATGA





744
MGST1_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTATTCCTTGAGTG




GTCCCGACCCCTCTACAGCCATCCTGCACTTCAGACTATTTGTCGG





745
MYH7_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGACCAGGCCTT




TTGACCTCAAGAAGGATGTCTTCGTGCCTGATGACAAACAGGAGTTT





746
MYH7_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGAGCTCTTCAAA




CTCAAGAACGCCTATGAGGAGTCCCTGGAACATCTGGAGACCTTCA





747
NEBL_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGGTCTTCTATA




AGCCTGTTATTGAAGACTTAAGCATGGAATTGGCCAGAAAATGCACG





748
NEBL_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAAGAGCAAAACT




ACAAGGCCACTCCGGTAAGCATGACCCCGGAGATAGAGAGAGTGAG





749
PDE4DIP_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGGATATCGCACTC




TGTCCCAGCACCTCAATGACCTGAAGAAGGAGAACTTCAGCCTCAAG





750
PDE4DIP_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAAGCCAAGCTG




CTGCAGAGAAGTTGGTGCAAGCCTTAATGGAAAGAAATTCAGAATT





751
PDIA4_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCGGACGAGGATT




CTTCTAACAGAGAAAATGCCATTGAGGATGAAGAGGAGGAGGAGGAG





752
PDIA4_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCGTCAAGGTCGTG




GTGGGAAAGACCTTTGACTCCATTGTGATGGACCCCAAGAAGGACG





753
RP9P_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGATCACGAGTTA




TGAAAAACCTCCTCCTGGGCTTATCAAGGTTGGCATTGCAAATGGT





754
RP9P_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAAGTTTCTTCAT




CGTTGTCCTCCCTGCTGGTCACATGAGTTTACGATTCCTTAGAAGTG





755
SERPINF2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCCGGCGCGTTCC




GACTGGCTGCCAGGATGTACCTGCAGAAAGGATTTCCCATCAAAGA





756
SERPINF2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCCTGAAAGGCTT




CCCCCGCGGAGACAAGCTTTTCGGCCCTGACTTAAAACTTGTGCCC





757
SOD2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAACAACCTGAACG




TCACCGAGGAGAAGTACCAGGAGGCGTTGGCCAAGGGAGATGTTAC





758
SOD2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGGAGAAGCTGAC




GGCTGCATCTGTTGGTGTCCAAGGCTCAGGTTGGGGTTGGCTTGGT





759
STARD10_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGACCAAGACTTTC




GCAGCTTCCGGTCAGAGTGTGAGGCTGAGGTGGGCTGGAACCTGACC





760
STARD10_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGATGTACAAGGC




GTGCCTCAAGTACCCCGAGTGGAAACAGAAGCACCTGCCTCACTTCA





761
TAF1A_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTTCAGTGAAGAAT




TAAAAGGGCCTGTGACAGATGATGAAGAAGTGGAAACATCTGTGCTC





762
TAF1A_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAACCACCTTGC




GTGGGTTCAAGAAGAGTGGAACTCCAGGAAAAACTGGTGGCCAGGC





763
TFR2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTTTGGGGTCTAT




TCCAGAGAGCGCAACAACTGTCCCCAAGATCCTCTCAGACCGTCTAC





764
TFR2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGGCCTACCCATT




CCTGCACACAAAGGAGGACACTTATGAGAACCTGCATAAGGTGCTG





765
TMEM14A_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATCGGTTTTGGTT




ATGCAGCCCTCGTGACATTTGGAAGCATTTTTGGATATAAGCGGAGA





766
TMEM14A_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCTTTCTTCCTGG




CTACCATAATGGGTGTGAGATTTAAGAGGTCCAAGAAAATAATGCC





767
TRAPPC1_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCACAACCTGTACC




TGTTTGACCGGAATGGAGTGTGTCTGCACTACAGCGAATGGCACCGC





768
TRAPPC1_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATCCGAGATGTGC




TGCACCACATCTACAGTGCGCTGTATGTGGAGCTGGTGGTGAAGAA





769
APOB_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCCGAAGAGGAAA




TGCTGGAAAATGTCAGCCTGGTCTGTCCAAAAGATGCGACCCGATTC





770
APOB_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGCTGACCTCAT




CGAGATTGGCTTGGAAGGAAAAGGCTTTGAGCCAACATTGGAAGCT





771
ATP5E_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTACTGGAGACAGG




CTGGACTCAGCTACATCCGATACTCCCAGATCTGTGCAAAAGCAGTG





772
ATP5E_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTGAAGACAGAAT




TCAAAGCAAATGCTGAGAAGACTTCTGGCAGCAACGTAAAAATTGTG





773
BVES_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNACAGAGTCCAGCC




CATTGAGAGAATCAACTGCCATAGGTTTTACACCTGAGTTAGAAAGT





774
BVES_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGCCAGCTCCAGT




GACAGTGACGACGGCTTGCACCAGTTTCTTCGGGGTACCTCCAGCA





775
DKK3_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGACACGCAGCACA




AATTGCGCAGCGCGGTGGAAGAGATGGAGGCAGAAGAAGCTGCTGC





776
DKK3_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTGGTGTATGTGTG




CAAGCCGACCTTCGTGGGGAGCCGTGACCAAGATGGGGAGATCCTG





777
FGA_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATGAGGATCGTCT




GCCTGGTCCTAAGTGTGGTGGGCACAGCATGGACTGCAGATAGTGGT





778
FGA_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATTTTTTCTGTTT




ATTGCGATCAAGAGACCAGTTTGGGAGGATGGCTTTTGATCCAGCA





779
FGL1_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGTGTTCAGTTTCA




TCCTTGTTACCACCGCTCTGACAATGGGCAGGGAAATTTCGGCGCTC





780
FGL1_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTGCAAACCTGAAT




GGTGTATACTACAGCGGCCCCTACACGGCTAAAACAGACAATGGGA





781
HAND2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCATCCCCAACGTA




CCCGCCGACACCAAACTCTCCAAAATCAAGACCCTGCGCCTGGCCA





782
HAND2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCGACCAGAATGGC




GAGGCGGAGGCCTTCAAGGCAGAGATCAAGAAGACCGACGTGAAAG





783
MGP_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTGATCCTTCTTG




CCATCCTGGCCGCCTTAGCGGTAGTAACTTTGTGTTATGAATCACAT





784
MGP_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCGAGCTCAATAGG




GAAGCCTGTGATGACTACAGACTTTGCGAACGCTACGCCATGGTTT





785
MGST1_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAGAAGTATCTTC




GAACAGATGACAGAGTAGAACGTGTACGCAGAGCCCACCTGAATGA





786
MGST1_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTATTCCTTGAGTG




GTCCCGACCCCTCTACAGCCATCCTGCACTTCAGACTATTTGTCGG





787
MYH7_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGACCAGGCCTT




TTGACCTCAAGAAGGATGTCTTCGTGCCTGATGACAAACAGGAGTTT





788
MYH7_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGAGCTCTTCAAA




CTCAAGAACGCCTATGAGGAGTCCCTGGAACATCTGGAGACCTTCA





789
NEBL_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCAGGTCTTCTATA




AGCCTGTTATTGAAGACTTAAGCATGGAATTGGCCAGAAAATGCACG





790
NEBL_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAAGAGCAAAACT




ACAAGGCCACTCCGGTAAGCATGACCCCGGAGATAGAGAGAGTGAG





791
PDE4DIP_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGGATATCGCACTC




TGTCCCAGCACCTCAATGACCTGAAGAAGGAGAACTTCAGCCTCAAG





792
PDE4DIP_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAAGCCAAGCTG




CTGCAGAGAAGTTGGTGCAAGCCTTAATGGAAAGAAATTCAGAATT





793
PDIA4_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCGGACGAGGATT




CTTCTAACAGAGAAAATGCCATTGAGGATGAAGAGGAGGAGGAGGAG





794
PDIA4_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCGTCAAGGTCGTG




GTGGGAAAGACCTTTGACTCCATTGTGATGGACCCCAAGAAGGACG





795
RP9P_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGATCACGAGTTA




TGAAAAACCTCCTCCTGGGCTTATCAAGGTTGGCATTGCAAATGGT





796
RP9P_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAAAGTTTCTTCAT




CGTTGTCCTCCCTGCTGGTCACATGAGTTTACGATTCCTTAGAAGTG





797
SERPINF2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCCCGGCGCGTTCC




GACTGGCTGCCAGGATGTACCTGCAGAAAGGATTTCCCATCAAAGA





798
SERPINF2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCCTGAAAGGCTT




CCCCCGCGGAGACAAGCTTTTCGGCCCTGACTTAAAACTTGTGCCC





799
SOD2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAACAACCTGAACG




TCACCGAGGAGAAGTACCAGGAGGCGTTGGCCAAGGGAGATGTTAC





800
SOD2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGGAGAAGCTGAC




GGCTGCATCTGTTGGTGTCCAAGGCTCAGGTTGGGGTTGGCTTGGT





801
STARD10_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGACCAAGACTTTC




GCAGCTTCCGGTCAGAGTGTGAGGCTGAGGTGGGCTGGAACCTGACC





802
STARD10_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGATGTACAAGGC




GTGCCTCAAGTACCCCGAGTGGAAACAGAAGCACCTGCCTCACTTCA





803
TAF1A_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNTTCAGTGAAGAAT




TAAAAGGGCCTGTGACAGATGATGAAGAAGTGGAAACATCTGTGCTC





804
TAF1A_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGAAACCACCTTGC




GTGGGTTCAAGAAGAGTGGAACTCCAGGAAAAACTGGTGGCCAGGC





805
TFR2_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCTTTGGGGTCTAT




TCCAGAGAGCGCAACAACTGTCCCCAAGATCCTCTCAGACCGTCTAC





806
TFR2_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNAGGCCTACCCATT




CCTGCACACAAAGGAGGACACTTATGAGAACCTGCATAAGGTGCTG





807
TMEM14A_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATCGGTTTTGGTT




ATGCAGCCCTCGTGACATTTGGAAGCATTTTTGGATATAAGCGGAGA





808
TMEM14A_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNGCTTTCTTCCTGG




CTACCATAATGGGTGTGAGATTTAAGAGGTCCAAGAAAATAATGCC





809
TRAPPC1_1
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNCACAACCTGTACC




TGTTTGACCGGAATGGAGTGTGTCTGCACTACAGCGAATGGCACCGC





810
TRAPPC1_2
ATGTGACTGGCACGGGAGTTGATCCTGGTTTTCACNNNNNNATCCGAGATGTGC




TGCACCACATCTACAGTGCGCTGTATGTGGAGCTGGTGGTGAAGAA









In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.

Claims
  • 1. A method for generating a tagged genomic library comprising: (a) treating fragmented genomic DNA with end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA; and(b) ligating a random nucleic acid tag sequence, and optionally a sample code sequence and/or a PCR primer sequence to the fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA to generate the tagged genomic library.
  • 2. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the random nucleic acid tag sequence is from about 2 to about 100 nucleotides.
  • 3. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the random nucleic acid tag sequence is from about 2 to about 6 nucleotides.
  • 4. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA contains blunt ends.
  • 5. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the blunt ends are further modified to contain a single base pair overhang.
  • 6. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the ligating comprises ligating a multifunctional adaptor module to the fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA to generate the tagged genomic library, wherein the multifunctional adaptor molecule comprises: (i) a first region comprising a random nucleic acid tag sequence;(ii) a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and(iii) a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.
  • 7. The method of any of the preceding claims, further comprising hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module to form a complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library.
  • 8. The method of any of the preceding claims, further comprising isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex.
  • 9. The method of any of the preceding claims, further comprising 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing of the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex to remove the single stranded 3′ ends.
  • 10. The method of any of the preceding claims wherein the enzyme for use in the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing is T4 DNA polymerase.
  • 11. The method of any of the preceding claims, further comprising performing PCR on the 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatically processed complex from the preceding claims, wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.
  • 12. A method for targeted genetic analysis comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library;(b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a);(c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends;(d) performing PCR on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is copied in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and(e) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from d).
  • 13. The method of claim 12, wherein steps a) through d) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of e) comprises a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two d) steps.
  • 14. The method of claim 13, wherein at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.
  • 15. The method of claim 14, wherein at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.
  • 16. A method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module complex selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library;(b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a);(c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends;(d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence;(e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in d); and(f) quantitating the PCR reaction in e), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific genomic target region.
  • 17. The method of claim 16, further comprising obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step e).
  • 18. The method of claim 17, wherein steps a) through e) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment is performed using the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two e) steps.
  • 19. The method of claim 18, wherein at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.
  • 20. The method of claim 19, wherein at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.
  • 21. A method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module complex selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library;(b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a);(c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends;(d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence; and(e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in d).
  • 22. The method of claim 21, further comprising obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step e).
  • 23. The method of claim 22, wherein steps a) through e) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment is performed using the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two e) steps.
  • 24. The method of claim 23, wherein at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.
  • 25. The method of claim 24, wherein at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.
  • 26. A method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe module comprises selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library;(b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from a);(c) performing 3′-5′ exonuclease enzymatic processing on the isolated tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe module complex from b) using an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity to remove the single stranded 3′ ends;(d) performing a PCR reaction on the enzymatically processed complex from c) wherein the tail portion of the multifunctional capture probe molecule is replicated in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the genomic target region capable of hybridizing to the multifunctional capture probe module and the complement of the multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence;(e) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in d); and(f) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from e).
  • 27. The method of claim 26, wherein steps a) through e) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of f) comprises performing a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences from the at least two e) steps.
  • 28. The method of claim 27, wherein at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.
  • 29. The method of claim 28, wherein at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.
  • 30. A method for targeted genetic analysis comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library;(b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a);(c) performing 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe on the complex from b) to replicate a region of the captured, tagged genomic target region that is 3′ of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged genomic target region that is located in the 3′ direction from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target region; and(d) performing targeted genetic analysis on the hybrid nucleic acid molecule from c).
  • 31. The method of claim 30, wherein steps a) through c) are repeated at least about twice and the targeted genetic analysis of d) comprises a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule sequences obtained from the at least two d) steps.
  • 32. The method of claim 31, wherein at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.
  • 33. The method of claim 32, wherein at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.
  • 34. A method for determining copy number of a specific genomic target region comprising: (a) hybridizing a tagged genomic library with a multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex, wherein the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module selectively hybridizes to a specific genomic target region in the genomic library;(b) isolating the tagged genomic library-multifunctional capture probe hybrid module complex from a);(c) performing 5′ to 3′ DNA polymerase extension of the multifunctional capture probe on the complex from b) to replicate a region of the captured tagged genomic target region that is 3′ of the multifunctional capture probe in order to generate a hybrid nucleic acid molecule, wherein the hybrid nucleic acid molecule comprises the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module and the complement of a region of the tagged genomic target region that is located in the 3′ direction from the location where the multifunctional capture probe hybrid module hybridizes to the genomic target region; and(d) performing PCR amplification of the hybrid nucleic acid molecule in c); and(e) quantitating the PCR reaction in d), wherein the quantitation allows for a determination of copy number of the specific genomic target region.
  • 35. The method of claim 34, further comprising obtaining the sequences of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from step d).
  • 36. The method of claim 35, wherein steps a) through d) are repeated at least about twice and a sequence alignment of the hybrid nucleic acid molecules from the at least two d) steps.
  • 37. The method of claim 36, wherein at least two different multifunctional capture probe modules are used in the at least two a) steps, wherein the at least two a) steps employ one multifunctional capture probe module each.
  • 38. The method of claim 37, wherein at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes downstream of the genomic target region and at least one multifunctional capture probe module hybridizes upstream of the genomic target region.
  • 39. The method of any of the preceding claims wherein the targeted genetic analysis is sequence analysis.
  • 40. The method of any of the preceding claims wherein the tagged genomic library is amplified by PCR to generate an amplified tagged genomic library.
  • 41. The method of any of the preceding claims wherein the genomic DNA is from a biological sample selected from the group consisting of blood, skin, hair, hair follicles, saliva, oral mucous, vaginal mucous, sweat, tears, epithelial tissues, urine, semen, seminal fluid, seminal plasma, prostatic fluid, pre-ejaculatory fluid (Cowper's fluid), excreta, biopsy, ascites, cerebrospinal fluid, lymph, and tissue extract sample or biopsy sample.
  • 42. A tagged genomic library comprising tagged genomic sequences, wherein each tagged genomic sequence comprises: (a) fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA;(b) a random nucleotide tag sequence;(c) a sample code sequence; and(d) a PCR primer sequence.
  • 43. A hybrid tagged genomic library comprising hybrid tagged genomic sequences for use in targeted genetic analysis, wherein each hybrid tagged genomic sequence comprises: (a) fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA;(b) a random nucleotide tag sequence;(c) a sample code sequence;(d) a PCR primer sequence;(e) a genomic target region; and(f) a multifunctional capture probe module tail sequence.
  • 44. A multifunctional adaptor module comprising: (a) a first region comprising a random nucleotide tag sequence;(b) a second region comprising a sample code sequence; and(c) a third region comprising a PCR primer sequence.
  • 45. A multifunctional capture probe module comprising: (a) a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide;(b) a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific genomic target region; and(c) a third region comprising a tail sequence.
  • 46. The multifunctional capture probe module of any of the preceding claims wherein the first region is bound to a partner oligonucleotide.
  • 47. A multifunctional adaptor probe hybrid module comprising: (a) a first region capable of hybridizing to a partner oligonucleotide and capable of functioning as a PCR primer and(b) a second region capable of hybridizing to a specific genomic target region.
  • 48. The multifunctional capture probe hybrid module of any of the preceding claims, wherein the first region is bound to a partner oligonucleotide.
  • 49. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the partner oligonucleotide is chemically modified.
  • 50. A composition comprising a tagged genomic library, a multifunctional adaptor module and a multifunctional capture probe module.
  • 51. A composition comprising a hybrid tagged genomic library according to any of the preceding claims.
  • 52. A reaction mixture for performing the method of any one of the preceding claims.
  • 53. A reaction mixture capable of generating a tagged genomic library comprising: (a) fragmented genomic DNA; and(b) DNA end-repair enzymes to generate fragmented end-repaired genomic DNA.
  • 54. The reaction mixture of any of the preceding claims, further comprising a multifunctional adaptor module.
  • 55. The reaction mixture of any of the preceding claims, further comprising a multifunctional capture probe module.
  • 56. The reaction mixture of any of the preceding claims, further comprising an enzyme with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity and PCR amplification activity.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/102,285, filed Dec. 10, 2013, which claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/794,049, filed Mar. 15, 2013, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/735,417, filed Dec. 10, 2012, which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.

Provisional Applications (2)
Number Date Country
61794049 Mar 2013 US
61735417 Dec 2012 US
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 14102285 Dec 2013 US
Child 15873510 US