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A simple procedure for directly obtaining haplotype sequences of diploid genomes
Authors:Harry A. Noyes  Derek Daly  Ian Goodhead  Suzanne Kay  Steven J. Kemp  John Kenny  Ilik Saccheri  Robert D. Schnabel  Jeremy F. Taylor  Neil Hall
Affiliation:.Centre for Genome Research, Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Crown St., Liverpool, L69 7ZB UK ;.Division of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri USA
Abstract:

Background

Almost all genome sequencing projects neglect the fact that diploid organisms contain two genome copies and consequently what is published is a composite of the two. This means that the relationship between alternate alleles at two or more linked loci is lost. We have developed a simplified method of directly obtaining the haploid sequences of each genome copy from an individual organism.

Results

The diploid sequences of three groups of cattle samples were obtained using a simple sample preparation procedure requiring only a microscope and a haemocytometer. Samples were: 1) lymphocytes from a single Angus steer; 2) sperm cells from an Angus bull; 3) lymphocytes from East African Zebu (EAZ) cattle collected and processed in a field laboratory in Eastern Kenya. Haploid sequence from a fosmid library prepared from lymphocytes of an EAZ cow was used for comparison. Cells were serially diluted to a concentration of one cell per microlitre by counting with a haemocytometer at each dilution. One microlitre samples, each potentially containing a single cell, were lysed and divided into six aliquots (except for the sperm samples which were not divided into aliquots). Each aliquot was amplified with phi29 polymerase and sequenced. Contigs were obtained by mapping to the bovine UMD3.1 reference genome assembly and scaffolds were assembled by joining adjacent contigs that were within a threshold distance of each other. Scaffolds that appeared to contain artefacts of CNV or repeats were filtered out leaving scaffolds with an N50 length of 27–133 kb and a 88–98 % genome coverage. SNP haplotypes were assembled with the Single Individual Haplotyper program to generate an N50 size of 97–201 kb but only ~27–68 % genome coverage. This method can be used in any laboratory with no special equipment at only slightly higher costs than conventional diploid genome sequencing. A substantial body of software for analysis and workflow management was written and is available as supplementary data.

Conclusions

We have developed a set of laboratory protocols and software tools that will enable any laboratory to obtain haplotype sequences at only modestly greater cost than traditional mixed diploid sequences.
Keywords:Haplotype   Next generation sequencing   Cow   Scaffold   Protocol   Diploid genome sequence
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