Evaluation of Hybridization Capture Versus Amplicon-Based Methods for Whole-Exome Sequencing

Eric Samorodnitsky, Benjamin M. Jewell, Raffi Hagopian, Jharna Miya, Michele R. Wing, Ezra Lyon, Senthilkumar Damodaran, Darshna Bhatt, Julie W. Reeser, Jharna Datta, Sameek Roychowdhury

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

176 Scopus citations

Abstract

Next-generation sequencing has aided characterization of genomic variation. While whole-genome sequencing may capture all possible mutations, whole-exome sequencing remains cost-effective and captures most phenotype-altering mutations. Initial strategies for exome enrichment utilized a hybridization-based capture approach. Recently, amplicon-based methods were designed to simplify preparation and utilize smaller DNA inputs. We evaluated two hybridization capture-based and two amplicon-based whole-exome sequencing approaches, utilizing both Illumina and Ion Torrent sequencers, comparing on-target alignment, uniformity, and variant calling. While the amplicon methods had higher on-target rates, the hybridization capture-based approaches demonstrated better uniformity. All methods identified many of the same single-nucleotide variants, but each amplicon-based method missed variants detected by the other three methods and reported additional variants discordant with all three other technologies. Many of these potential false positives or negatives appear to result from limited coverage, low variant frequency, vicinity to read starts/ends, or the need for platform-specific variant calling algorithms. All methods demonstrated effective copy-number variant calling when evaluated against a single-nucleotide polymorphism array. This study illustrates some differences between whole-exome sequencing approaches, highlights the need for selecting appropriate variant calling based on capture method, and will aid laboratories in selecting their preferred approach. Next generation sequencing has aided characterization of genomic variation. While whole genome sequencing remains costly, several whole exome sequencing technologies are available to detect phenotype-altering mutations. We evaluated four such technologies to appraise sequencing uniformity and variant detection.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)903-914
Number of pages12
JournalHuman mutation
Volume36
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bioinformatics
  • Exome sequencing
  • Genomics
  • NGS
  • Next generation sequencing
  • WES

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics
  • Genetics(clinical)

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