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  2. Single-molecule real-time sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-molecule_real-time...

    The DNA sequencing is done on a chip that contains many ZMWs. Inside each ZMW, a single active DNA polymerase with a single molecule of single stranded DNA template is immobilized to the bottom through which light can penetrate and create a visualization chamber that allows monitoring of the activity of the DNA polymerase at a single molecule level.

  3. Single molecule fluorescent sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_molecule...

    Single molecule fluorescent sequencing is one method of DNA sequencing. The core principle is the imaging of individual fluorophore molecules, each corresponding to one base. [1] By working on single molecule level, amplification of DNA is not required, avoiding amplification bias. The method lends itself to parallelization by probing many ...

  4. DNA sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_sequencing

    Most sequencing approaches use an in vitro cloning step to amplify individual DNA molecules, because their molecular detection methods are not sensitive enough for single molecule sequencing. Emulsion PCR [ 75 ] isolates individual DNA molecules along with primer-coated beads in aqueous droplets within an oil phase.

  5. Sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequencing

    However, new sequencing technologies such as pyrosequencing are gaining an increasing share of the sequencing market. More genome data are now being produced by pyrosequencing than Sanger DNA sequencing. Pyrosequencing has enabled rapid genome sequencing. Bacterial genomes can be sequenced in a single run with several times coverage with this ...

  6. Read (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Read_(biology)

    In DNA sequencing, a read is an inferred sequence of base pairs (or base pair probabilities) corresponding to all or part of a single DNA fragment. A typical sequencing experiment involves fragmentation of the genome into millions of molecules, which are size-selected and ligated to adapters. The set of fragments is referred to as a sequencing ...

  7. Chimera (molecular biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimera_(molecular_biology)

    In molecular biology, and more importantly high-throughput DNA sequencing, a chimera is a single DNA sequence originating when multiple transcripts or DNA sequences get joined. Chimeras can be considered artifacts and be filtered out from the data during processing [ 1 ] to prevent spurious inferences of biological variation. [ 2 ]

  8. Oligonucleotide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligonucleotide

    Oligonucleotides are short DNA or RNA molecules, oligomers, that have a wide range of applications in genetic testing, research, and forensics.Commonly made in the laboratory by solid-phase chemical synthesis, [1] these small fragments of nucleic acids can be manufactured as single-stranded molecules with any user-specified sequence, and so are vital for artificial gene synthesis, polymerase ...

  9. Single-cell sequencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-cell_sequencing

    Single-cell DNA genome sequencing involves isolating a single cell, amplifying the whole genome or region of interest, constructing sequencing libraries, and then applying next-generation DNA sequencing (for example Illumina, Ion Torrent). Single-cell DNA sequencing has been widely applied in mammalian systems to study normal physiology and ...