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  2. Sanger sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanger_sequencing

    Microfluidic Sanger sequencing is a lab-on-a-chip application for DNA sequencing, in which the Sanger sequencing steps (thermal cycling, sample purification, and capillary electrophoresis) are integrated on a wafer-scale chip using nanoliter-scale sample volumes. This technology generates long and accurate sequence reads, while obviating many ...

  3. Primer walking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primer_walking

    In contrast to directed sequencing, shotgun sequencing of DNA is a more rapid sequencing strategy. [6] There is a technique from the "old time" of genome sequencing. The underlying method for sequencing is the Sanger chain termination method which can have read lengths between 100 and 1000 basepairs (depending on the instruments used).

  4. Sequence analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequence_analysis

    At this step, sequencing reads whose quality have been improved are mapped to a reference genome using alignment tools like BWA [17] for short DNA sequence reads, minimap [18] for long read DNA sequences, and STAR [19] for RNA sequence reads. The purpose of mapping is to find the origin of any given read based on the reference sequence.

  5. DNA sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_sequencing

    For Sanger sequencing, either cloning procedures or PCR are required prior to sequencing. In the case of next-generation sequencing methods, library preparation is required before processing. [ 162 ] Assessing the quality and quantity of nucleic acids both after extraction and after library preparation identifies degraded, fragmented, and low ...

  6. Serial analysis of gene expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_analysis_of_gene...

    Instead, the cDNA is randomly fragmented and the 3'ends are sequenced from the 5' end of the cDNA molecule that carries the poly-A tail. The sequencing length of the tag can be freely chosen. Because of this, the tags can be assembled into contigs and the annotation of the tags can be drastically improved.

  7. DNA sequencer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_sequencer

    SOLiD applies sequencing by ligation and dual base encoding. The first SOLiD system was launched in 2007, generating reading lengths of 35bp and 3G data per run. After five upgrades, the 5500xl sequencing system was released in 2010, considerably increasing read length to 85bp, improving accuracy up to 99.99% and producing 30G per 7-day run. [10]

  8. Genotyping by sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genotyping_by_sequencing

    Next-generation sequencing technology is performed resulting in about 100 bp single-end reads. Raw sequence data are filtered and aligned to a reference genome using usually Burrows–Wheeler alignment tool (BWA) or Bowtie 2. The next step is to identify SNPs from aligned tags and score all discovered SNPs for various coverage, depth and ...

  9. Primer extension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primer_extension

    Typically, a sequencing ladder using the same primer is also on the gel, allowing for rapid identification of the +1 nucleotide (shown in purple.) Primer extension is a technique whereby the 5' ends of RNA can be mapped - that is, they can be sequenced and properly identified.