Template Quality and Quantity November 7, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Sample Requirement, knowledge.Tags: contamination, dna template, purity, quality, quantity
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Reference: BigDye Terminator v1.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit Protocol, Applied Biosystems 2002 (Part# 4337036A), BigDye Terminator v3.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit Protocol, Applied Biosystems 2002 (Part# 4337035A)
Link: Griffith University Website
The success of your sequencing reaction depends upon the quality and quantity of DNA template. The capillary system is very sensitive to contaminants such as proteins, RNA and residual salts. Not only is the quality of result affected by such contaminants but the presence of proteins and high concentrations of DNA can reduce the life of the capillary array. For detailed information on DNA template preparation, DNA template quality and quantity, primer design and quantitation, refer to Performing DNA Sequencing Reactions, Section 3 in the Applied Biosystem’s Automated DNA Sequencing Chemistry Guide (Part# 4305080).
Template Quality: Potential contaminants include proteins, RNA, residual salts, excess PCR primers, dNTPs, enzyme and buffer components (from PCR amplification). The DNA should be examined by agarose gel electrophoresis and spectrophotometry in order to assess the quality of the template.
Template Quantity: Template quantitation is critical for successful sequencing reactions. The preferred method for quantitation is by gel electrophoresis with a DNA mass ladder standard. However, spectroscopic method is sufficient enough to determine DNA concentration and purity by measusing absorbance at 260 nm and 280 nm.
DNA Sequencing Service Price List November 6, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Price, Sample Requirement.add a comment
The price for common DNA Sequencing service is:
- 1 reaction = US$ 25/reaction
- 2 - 7 reaction = US$ 20/reaction
- 8 - ~ reaction = US$ 15/reaction
Reaction means 1 directional sequencing using 1 primer.
e.g. if you have 1 sample and is red using 2 primers
(bi-direction), it is considered as 2 reactions,
and the price is 2 x US$ 20 = US$ 40.
Additional charge is applied for template purification US$ 2/sample.
How to send your sample? November 1, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Sample Requirement.Tags: address, request form, sample, submit
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You can submit your sample by the following method:
- Send samples via Express post (TIKI, DHL, FedEx, etc). Please use 1 day service in order to prevent sample degradation. There is no need to send your sample in a cold container (ice or dry ice)
- Send samples directly to our lab/office at:
PT. Charoen Pokphand Indonesia
(R&D Biotechnology Department)
Jln. Parangtritis Raya Blok A-5E No. 12A,
Ancol Barat, Jakarta 14430
Please fill Analysis Request Form (ARF),
and send it along with your samples.
Troubleshooting DNA Sequencing Problems October 26, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in troubleshooting.3 comments
Source: http://www.nucleics.com/DNA_sequencing_support/DNA-sequencing-troubleshooting.html
Automated DNA sequencing is one of the most common and robust techniques performed in molecular biological laboratories. Unfortunately, it does not always work and when it doesn’t it can be very difficult to work out what went wrong. Fortunately, most failed (or sub-optimal) DNA sequencing results have only a fairly limited number of causes. To help in the troubleshooting of sequencing problems we have created a series of guides for identifying the most common causes of various sequencing problems. These guides also includes tips on how to overcome each problem type, along with more general tips for improving DNA sequencing quality.
The Most Common Automated DNA Sequencing Problems
The following guides give examples of the major causes of sequencing problems and describes how to identify them and solve the underlying problems.
- Failure of the DNA sequencing reaction
- Mixed signal (multiple peaks) in the trace
- Short read lengths and poor quality data
- Poorly resolved trace peaks “blurry peaks”
- Excessive free dye peaks “dye blobs” in the trace
- Misshaped or “noisy” in the trace peaks
- Primer dimer formation in the sequencing reaction
- Sharp signal spikes in the trace chromatogram
- DNA Polymerase slippage on template mononucleotide regions
- Sequence stops in “difficult” template regions
- Breakdown of the DNA sequencing BigDye chemistry
- Insertion or deletions (indels) in the DNA template
- Chimeras and sequencing rearrangements
- Delayed start of trace signal in the raw signal channel
- A “G dye blob” at approximately base 190 and 400
- Excessive trace data collection times
Chain-termination methods October 26, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in knowledge.4 comments
From Wikipedia
While the chemical sequencing method of Maxam and Gilbert, and the plus-minus method of Sanger and Coulson were orders of magnitude faster than previous methods, the chain-terminator method developed by Sanger was even more efficient, and rapidly became the method of choice. The Maxam-Gilbert technique requires the use of highly toxic chemicals, and large amounts of radiolabeled DNA, whereas the chain-terminator method uses fewer toxic chemicals and lower amounts of radioactivity. The key principle of the Sanger method was the use of dideoxynucleotides triphosphates (ddNTPs) as DNA chain terminators.

Figure: Part of a radioactively labelled sequencing gel
The classical chain-termination or Sanger method requires a single-stranded DNA template, a DNA primer, a DNA polymerase, radioactively or fluorescently labeled nucleotides, and modified nucleotides that terminate DNA strand elongation. The DNA sample is divided into four separate sequencing reactions, containing the four standard deoxynucleotides (dATP, dGTP, dCTP and dTTP) and the DNA polymerase. To each reaction is added only one of the four dideoxynucleotides (ddATP, ddGTP, ddCTP, or ddTTP). These dideoxynucleotides are the chain-terminating nucleotides, lacking a 3′-OH group required for the formation of a phosphodiester bond between two nucleotides during DNA strand elongation. Incorporation of a dideoxynucleotide into the nascent (elongating) DNA strand therefore terminates DNA strand extension, resulting in various DNA fragments of varying length. The dideoxynucleotides are added at lower concentration than the standard deoxynucleotides to allow strand elongation sufficient for sequence analysis.

Figure: DNA fragments can be labeled by using a radioactive or fluorescent tag on the primer (1), in the new DNA strand with a labeled dNTP, or with a labeled ddNTP.
The newly synthesized and labeled DNA fragments are heat denatured, and separated by size (with a resolution of just one nucleotide) by gel electrophoresis on a denaturing polyacrylamide-urea gel. Each of the four DNA synthesis reactions is run in one of four individual lanes (lanes A, T, G, C); the DNA bands are then visualized by autoradiography or UV light, and the DNA sequence can be directly read off the X-ray film or gel image. In the image on the right, X-ray film was exposed to the gel, and the dark bands correspond to DNA fragments of different lengths. A dark band in a lane indicates a DNA fragment that is the result of chain termination after incorporation of a dideoxynucleotide (ddATP, ddGTP, ddCTP, or ddTTP). The terminal nucleotide base can be identified according to which dideoxynucleotide was added in the reaction giving that band. The relative positions of the different bands among the four lanes are then used to read (from bottom to top) the DNA sequence as indicated.
There are some technical variations of chain-termination sequencing. In one method, the DNA fragments are tagged with nucleotides containing radioactive phosphorus for radiolabelling. Alternatively, a primer labeled at the 5’ end with a fluorescent dye is used for the tagging. Four separate reactions are still required, but DNA fragments with dye labels can be read using an optical system, facilitating faster and more economical analysis and automation. This approach is known as ‘dye-primer sequencing’. The later development by L Hood and coworkers[6][7] of fluorescently labeled ddNTPs and primers set the stage for automated, high-throughput DNA sequencing.
The different chain-termination methods have greatly simplified the amount of work and planning needed for DNA sequencing. For example, the chain-termination-based “Sequenase” kit from USB Biochemicals contains most of the reagents needed for sequencing, prealiquoted and ready to use. Some sequencing problems can occur with the Sanger Method, such as non-specific binding of the primer to the DNA, affecting accurate read out of the DNA sequence. In addition, secondary structures within the DNA template, or contaminating RNA randomly priming at the DNA template can also affect the fidelity of the obtained sequence. Other contaminants affecting the reaction may consist of extraneous DNA or inhibitors of the DNA polymerase.
Dye-terminator sequencing
An alternative to primer labelling is labelling of the chain terminators, a method commonly called ‘dye-terminator sequencing’. The major advantage of this method is that the sequencing can be performed in a single reaction, rather than four reactions as in the labelled-primer method. In dye-terminator sequencing, each of the four dideoxynucleotide chain terminators is labelled with a different fluorescent dye, each fluorescing at a different wavelength. This method is attractive because of its greater expediency and speed and is now the mainstay in automated sequencing with computer-controlled sequence analyzers (see below). Its potential limitations include dye effects due to differences in the incorporation of the dye-labelled chain terminators into the DNA fragment, resulting in unequal peak heights and shapes in the electronic DNA sequence trace chromatogram after capillary electrophoresis (see figure to the right). This problem has largely been overcome with the introduction of new DNA polymerase enzyme systems and dyes that minimize incorporation variability, as well as methods for eliminating “dye blobs”, caused by certain chemical characteristics of the dyes that can result in artifacts in DNA sequence traces. The dye-terminator sequencing method, along with automated high-throughput DNA sequence analyzers, is now being used for the vast majority of sequencing projects, as it is both easier to perform and lower in cost than most previous sequencing methods.
Automation and sample preparation
Modern automated DNA sequencing instruments (DNA sequencers) can sequence up to 384 fluorescently labelled samples in a single batch (run) and perform as many as 24 runs a day. However, automated DNA sequencers carry out only DNA size separation by capillary electrophoresis, detection and recording of dye fluorescence, and data output as fluorescent peak trace chromatograms. Sequencing reactions by thermocycling, cleanup and re-suspension in a buffer solution before loading onto the sequencer are performed separately.
Figure: Sequence ladder by radioactive sequencing compared to fluorescent peaks
Figure: View of the start of an example dye-terminator read
Useful Literature October 25, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in knowledge.add a comment
DNA Sequencing on Wikipedia
Primer October 24, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Sample Requirement.2 comments
We provide general primers for free:
- 63F & 1387R universal primer for 16S rRNA gene amplification (Marchesi, et.al.)
- Universal 18S primer for 18S rRNA gene amplification
- M13F & M13R for common plasmid insert amplification
- T3 & T7 promoter primer for common plasmid insert amplification
User developed primer should be submitted along with samples. Minimum amount is 10µl in 5µM (nmol/µl) concentration
Annealing temperature should be mentioned in order to perform optimum amplification during cycle sequencing process. Otherwise we will apply 50C as default annealing temperature
DNA Template October 24, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Sample Requirement.Tags: dna sample, purification, template
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Minimum template volume requirements
- Unpurified Template : 20 µl
- Purified template : 10 µl
Template amount per reaction:
- PCR products: 1 ng / 100 bp long per reaction (i.e. We need 10 ng for 1000 bp PCR product to perform 1 reaction)
- Plasmids: 150 ng per reaction
Template Purification
- We use QiaQuick PCR Purification Kit (QIAGEN, USA) for template purification. It is suitable to purify both PCR Product and plasmid.
- Users who prefer to purify DNA template by themself can use any comparable purification kit.
Our Facility October 24, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Facility.Tags: Facility, method, option, sequencer
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DNA Sequencer

- ABI Prism 3100-Avant Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, USA).
- 4-Capillary Systems
Reagent
- BigDye v.3.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit
Method Option
- Ultra Rapid Sequencing
Capillary:22cm
Polymer: POP-4
Optimum Read: up to 400 bp (1 direction)
- Rapid Sequencing
Capillary:36cm
Polymer: POP-6
Optimum Read: up to 500 bp (1 direction)
- Standard Sequencing
Capillary:50cm
Polymer: POP-6
Optimum Read: up to 600 bp (1 direction)
- Long Read Sequencing
Capillary:80cm
Polymer: POP-4
Optimum Read: up to 700 bp (1 direction)
DNA Sequencing Service October 5, 2007
Posted by yepyhardi in Facility.add a comment
R&D Biotechnology Department PT. Charoen Pokphand Indonesia provides DNA Sequencing service for either internal CP Groups or External Institutions.
We offer the following services:
- Single-directional Read
- Bi-directional Read
- Primer-walking Read


