Abstract

Long-read sequencing technologies have improved the contiguity and, as a result, the quality of genome assemblies by generating reads long enough to span and resolve complex or repetitive regions of the genome. Several groups have shown the power of long reads in detecting thousands of genomic and epigenomic features that were previously missed by short-read sequencing approaches. While these studies demonstrate how long reads can help resolve repetitive and complex regions of the genome, they also highlight the throughput and coverage requirements needed to accurately resolve variant alleles across large populations using these platforms. At the time of this review, whole-genome long-read sequencing is more expensive than short-read sequencing on the highest throughput short-read instruments; thus, achieving sufficient coverage to detect low-frequency variants (such as somatic variation) in heterogenous samples remains challenging. Targeted sequencing, on the other hand, provides the depth necessary to detect these low-frequency variants in heterogeneous populations. Here, we review currently used and recently developed targeted sequencing strategies that leverage existing long-read technologies to increase the resolution with which we can look at nucleic acids in a variety of biological contexts.

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