Abstract

The application of degenerate oligonucleotides to DNA Sequencing by Hybridisation with Oligonucleotide Matrix (SHOM) is proposed. The use of degenerate oligonucleotides is regarded as an example of pooling methods that are suitable for various laboratory procedures requiring numerous samples to be assayed. As each DNA sequence coded by four letters (A, G, C, T) may be defined by two sequences: a sequence coded by W and S (W-weak-A or T, S-strong-G or C) and a sequence coded by R and Y (R-purine-A or G, Y-pirymidine-T or C), n4n -nucleotide sequences may be defined with the help of 2xn2sequences. In the place of the originally described microchip matrix composed of all possible unambiguous octanucleotides (4(8)=65 536) attached to the equal number of 65 536 microlocations a matrix composed of 512 microlocations containing 256 2(8)-degenerate octanucleotides is proposed. The matrix contains all 256 possible octanucleotides coded by W and S variations and all 256 possible octanucleotides coded by R and Y variations. The 512 256-degenerate octanucleotides allows to retrieve the same information as 65 536 unambiguous octanucleotides. A variant of the DNA sequence reconstruction method applicable to this system is presented. The use of degenerate oligonucleotides also gives the possibility to apply matrices composed of longer oligonucleotides without increasing the number of microlocations in matrices, which would enable increasing the length of unambiguously reconstructed sequence, e.g. a matrix comprising 131 072 16-mer oligonucleotides i.e. 65 536 65 536-fold degenerate oligonucleotide coded by W and S variations and 65 536 65 536-fold degenerate oligonucleotide coded by R and Y variations could replace one matrix comprising all possible unambiguous 16-mer oligonucleotides (ca. 4.3x10(9)).

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