Optimizing DNA Shearing of Your Metagenomic Samples for Library Preparation
The challenge
DNA shearing is a necessary step in next generation sequencing, and an optimal method will help generate reliable sequencing results. Various methods are used to efficiently fragment DNA: acoustic cavitation, enzymatic, or mechanical methods.
The challenge is identifying and optimizing the method to:
- Produce appropriately and consistently sized DNA fragments
- Perform unbiased shearing where fragmentation is random and sequence-independent
- Obtain pure DNA samples, eliminating cross-contamination between samples
- Avoid sample loss to retain a high quantity of DNA
Impact
To appreciate the impact, it is important to understand the workflow downstream of DNA shearing. Following shearing, DNA fragments are selected based on size, prepared for sequencing (e.g., tagging), sequenced, and mapped to a reference genome. Sequence-specific DNA shearing could result in a lack of fragment size uniformity. During size selection, researchers eliminate undesired read lengths, which could result in important DNA regions being removed and an under-representation of microbial members.
Additionally, DNA shearing biased towards certain sequences could affect fragment overlap. If you are monitoring a genomic region commonly shared among the microbial members in your sample, fragments may be indistinguishable from species to species and could cause “mismapping” or an inaccurate assessment of copy number variations. This can result in researchers deeming certain microbial members absent or overabundant—creating a distorted picture of microbial distribution.
Non-random DNA fragmentation is currently being explored as a source of non-uniform coverage of various genomic regions. Of particular focus is sequence-specificity of sonication and hydrodynamic shearing and how understanding these biases can help inform experimental design and read mapping (Poptsova et al.).
To help generate reliable sequencing results, the DNA shearing method needs to be sequence-independent, or you should explore options for correcting for this bias.
How to address this challenge:
- Use an approach that is validated for your specific application (e.g.,The FastPrep-96 is validated for fragmenting 100-1000 ng of genomic DNA (gDNA) in high-throughput to generate read lengths 10-14 kilobases. Learn more.)
- Compare techniques (e.g., acoustic cavitation vs. enzymatic shearing vs. mechanical shearing) on your samples.
- Keep your metagenomic samples cool to avoid degradation.
- Optimize the shearing speed/intensity, shearing time, and number of cycles.
FastPrep-96TM Instrument
Maximize productivity with this high-throughput bead beating system—also validated for DNA shearing—that delivers on performance, speed, and reproducibility.
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