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Improved Detection of Rare HIV-1 Variants using 454 Pyrosequencing
Author(s) -
Brendan B. Larsen,
Lennie Chen,
Brandon S. Maust,
Moon Kim,
Hong Zhao,
Wenjie Deng,
Dylan H. Westfall,
Ingrid A. Beck,
Lisa M. Frenkel,
James I. Mullins
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0076502
Subject(s) - pyrosequencing , amplicon , biology , genetics , massive parallel sequencing , genome , computational biology , gene , polymerase chain reaction
454 pyrosequencing, a massively parallel sequencing (MPS) technology, is often used to study HIV genetic variation. However, the substantial mismatch error rate of the PCR required to prepare HIV-containing samples for pyrosequencing has limited the detection of rare variants within viral populations to those present above ~1%. To improve detection of rare variants, we varied PCR enzymes and conditions to identify those that combined high sensitivity with a low error rate. Substitution errors were found to vary up to 3-fold between the different enzymes tested. The sensitivity of each enzyme, which impacts the number of templates amplified for pyrosequencing, was shown to vary, although not consistently across genes and different samples. We also describe an amplicon-based method to improve the consistency of read coverage over stretches of the HIV-1 genome. Twenty-two primers were designed to amplify 11 overlapping amplicons in the HIV-1 clade B gag-pol and env gp120 coding regions to encompass 4.7 kb of the viral genome per sample at sensitivities as low as 0.01-0.2%.

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