Jeffrey Wegener
Pacific Biosciences
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jeffrey Wegener.
Science | 2009
John Eid; Adrian Fehr; Jeremy Gray; Khai Luong; John Lyle; Geoff Otto; Paul Peluso; David Rank; Primo Baybayan; Brad Bettman; Arkadiusz Bibillo; Keith Bjornson; Bidhan Chaudhuri; Frederick Christians; Ronald L. Cicero; Sonya Clark; Ravindra Dalal; Alex deWinter; John Dixon; Mathieu Foquet; Alfred Gaertner; Paul Hardenbol; Cheryl Heiner; Kevin Hester; David Holden; Gregory Kearns; Xiangxu Kong; Ronald Kuse; Yves Lacroix; Steven Lin
We present single-molecule, real-time sequencing data obtained from a DNA polymerase performing uninterrupted template-directed synthesis using four distinguishable fluorescently labeled deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs). We detected the temporal order of their enzymatic incorporation into a growing DNA strand with zero-mode waveguide nanostructure arrays, which provide optical observation volume confinement and enable parallel, simultaneous detection of thousands of single-molecule sequencing reactions. Conjugation of fluorophores to the terminal phosphate moiety of the dNTPs allows continuous observation of DNA synthesis over thousands of bases without steric hindrance. The data report directly on polymerase dynamics, revealing distinct polymerization states and pause sites corresponding to DNA secondary structure. Sequence data were aligned with the known reference sequence to assay biophysical parameters of polymerization for each template position. Consensus sequences were generated from the single-molecule reads at 15-fold coverage, showing a median accuracy of 99.3%, with no systematic error beyond fluorophore-dependent error rates.
Methods in Enzymology | 2010
Jonas Korlach; Keith Bjornson; Bidhan Chaudhuri; Ronald L. Cicero; Benjamin Flusberg; Jeremy Gray; David Holden; Ravi Saxena; Jeffrey Wegener; Stephen Turner
Pacific Biosciences has developed a method for real-time sequencing of single DNA molecules (Eid et al., 2009), with intrinsic sequencing rates of several bases per second and read lengths into the kilobase range. Conceptually, this sequencing approach is based on eavesdropping on the activity of DNA polymerase carrying out template-directed DNA polymerization. Performed in a highly parallel operational mode, sequential base additions catalyzed by each polymerase are detected with terminal phosphate-linked, fluorescence-labeled nucleotides. This chapter will first outline the principle of this single-molecule, real-time (SMRT) DNA sequencing method, followed by descriptions of its underlying components and typical sequencing run conditions. Two examples are provided which illustrate that, in addition to the DNA sequence, the dynamics of DNA polymerization from each enzyme molecules is directly accessible: the determination of base-specific kinetic parameters from single-molecule sequencing reads, and the characterization of DNA synthesis rate heterogeneities.
Nucleosides, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids | 2008
Jonas Korlach; Arek Bibillo; Jeffrey Wegener; Paul Peluso; Thang Pham; Insil Park; Sonya Clark; Geoff Otto; Stephen Turner
We demonstrate the efficient synthesis of DNA with complete replacement of the four deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) substrates with nucleotides carrying fluorescent labels. A different, spectrally separable fluorescent dye suitable for single molecule fluorescence detection was conjugated to each of the four dNTPs via linkage to the terminal phosphate. Using these modified nucleotides, DNA synthesis by φ29 DNA polymerase was observed to be processive for products thousands of bases in length, with labeled nucleotide affinities and DNA polymerization rates approaching unmodified dNTP levels. Results presented here show the compatibility of these nucleotides for single-molecule, real-time DNA sequencing applications.
Journal of Nanobiotechnology | 2013
Igor Vilfan; Yu-Chih Tsai; Tyson A. Clark; Jeffrey Wegener; Qing Dai; Chengqi Yi; Tao Pan; Stephen Turner; Jonas Korlach
BackgroundZero-mode waveguides (ZMWs) are photonic nanostructures that create highly confined optical observation volumes, thereby allowing single-molecule-resolved biophysical studies at relatively high concentrations of fluorescent molecules. This principle has been successfully applied in single-molecule, real-time (SMRT®) DNA sequencing for the detection of DNA sequences and DNA base modifications. In contrast, RNA sequencing methods cannot provide sequence and RNA base modifications concurrently as they rely on complementary DNA (cDNA) synthesis by reverse transcription followed by sequencing of cDNA. Thus, information on RNA modifications is lost during the process of cDNA synthesis.ResultsHere we describe an application of SMRT technology to follow the activity of reverse transcriptase enzymes synthesizing cDNA on thousands of single RNA templates simultaneously in real time with single nucleotide turnover resolution using arrays of ZMWs. This method thereby obtains information from the RNA template directly. The analysis of the kinetics of the reverse transcriptase can be used to identify RNA base modifications, shown by example for N6-methyladenine (m6A) in oligonucleotides and in a specific mRNA extracted from total cellular mRNA. Furthermore, the real-time reverse transcriptase dynamics informs about RNA secondary structure and its rearrangements, as demonstrated on a ribosomal RNA and an mRNA template.ConclusionsOur results highlight the feasibility of studying RNA modifications and RNA structural rearrangements in ZMWs in real time. In addition, they suggest that technology can be developed for direct RNA sequencing provided that the reverse transcriptase is optimized to resolve homonucleotide stretches in RNA.
Archive | 2005
Yue Xu; Jeffrey Wegener; Arek Bibillo
Archive | 2007
David Rank; Jeffrey Wegener; Jonas Korlach; Daniel Roitman; Yue Xu; John Lyle; Stephen Turner; Paul Peluso; Geoff Otto; Ronald L. Cicero
Archive | 2009
Benjamin Flusberg; Jonas Korlach; Jeffrey Wegener; Tyson A. Clark; Igor Vilfan; Andrey Kislyuk; Stephen Turner; Jon Sorenson; Kevin Travers; Cheryl Heiner; Austin B. Tomaney; Patrick Marks; Jessica Lee; Lei Jia; Dale Webster; John Lyle; Jeremiah Hanes; Joseph Puglisi
Archive | 2010
Yue Xu; Jeffrey Wegener; Arek Bibillo
Archive | 2014
Stephen Turner; Jeffrey Wegener
Archive | 2010
Jonas Korlach; Stephen Turner; Benjamin Flusberg; Mark Chaisson; Eric E. Schadt; Jeffrey Wegener