Characterization and remediation of sample index swaps by non-redundant dual indexing on massively parallel sequencing platforms.

BMC Genomics
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Here we present an in-depth characterization of the mechanism of sequencer-induced sample contamination due to the phenomenon of index swapping that impacts Illumina sequencers employing patterned flow cells with Exclusion Amplification (ExAmp) chemistry (HiSeqX, HiSeq4000, and NovaSeq). We also present a remediation method that minimizes the impact of such swaps.

RESULTS: Leveraging data collected over a two-year period, we demonstrate the widespread prevalence of index swapping in patterned flow cell data. We calculate mean swap rates across multiple sample preparation methods and sequencer models, demonstrating that different library methods can have vastly different swapping rates and that even non-ExAmp chemistry instruments display trace levels of index swapping. We provide methods for eliminating sample data cross contamination by utilizing non-redundant dual indexing for complete filtering of index swapped reads, and share the sequences for 96 non-combinatorial dual indexes we have validated across various library preparation methods and sequencer models. Finally, using computational methods we provide a greater insight into the mechanism of index swapping.

CONCLUSIONS: Index swapping in pooled libraries is a prevalent phenomenon that we observe at a rate of 0.2 to 6% in all sequencing runs on HiSeqX, HiSeq 4000/3000, and NovaSeq. Utilizing non-redundant dual indexing allows for the removal (flagging/filtering) of these swapped reads and eliminates swapping induced sample contamination, which is critical for sensitive applications such as RNA-seq, single cell, blood biopsy using circulating tumor DNA, or clinical sequencing.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
BMC Genomics
Volume
19
Issue
1
Pages
332
Date Published
2018 May 08
ISSN
1471-2164
DOI
10.1186/s12864-018-4703-0
PubMed ID
29739332
PubMed Central ID
PMC5941783
Links
Grant list
UM1 HG008895 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
UM1HG008895 / Center for Common Disease