Biological and biomedical research used to be a field anchored down by the weight of time-consuming manual tasks. Involved and laborious wet-lab processes slowed output to a crawl.
But now, high-throughput technologies have ramped up the speed of science. In this infographic, we take a deep dive into how these technologies have changed the game.
Download this infographic to discover:
• How next-generation sequencing technologies have revolutionized genomics
• High throughput workflows in drug discovery
• How industry and academia are harnessing the power of AI to accelerate research
Next-Generation Sequencing
Sanger-sequencing based approaches are also called firstgeneration techniques.
NGS platforms are the second generationof sequencing technology.
Third-generation sequencing technologies involve sequencing
long nucleic acid chains. This technology has advantages over
previous methods:
• Ability to quickly assess methylation sites
• Devices can be portable and lower cost
• But is currently undermined by a high error rate.
T
Next-generation
sequencing (NGS)
techniques have
greatly enhanced
the output of
genomic research.
Sanger sequencing,
which dominated
the field before
NGS, took 13
years to sequence
the first human
genome.
NGS can do it in just
over 5 hours.
An overview of NGS
Biological and biomedical research used to be a field anchored down by the weight of timeconsuming manual tasks. Involved and laborious wet-lab processes slowed output to a crawl.
But now, high-throughput technologies have ramped up the speed of science. In this infographic,
we take a deep dive into how these technologies have changed the game.
Sample/genome Fragmentation End repair & adapter ligation
Clonal amplification by emulsion PCR
Sequencing by ligation Pyrosequencing
PPi
ATP-Sulfurylase
ATP
Luciferase
Ligase
Proton detection sequencing
Reversible terminator sequencing
Clonal amplification by bridge PCR
Cluster generation
A B
DNA polymerase
Time
Intensity
DNA polymerase
DNA ligase
G A C A T A A C A C T A
C T G T
G A C A T A A C A C T A
A
A
T T
C T G T
DNA polymerase
H+
H+ H+
In short-read NGS, genetic material (DNA or RNA) is fragmented and oligonucleotides of known sequence are
bolted on through a step called adapter ligation. This enables the fragments to interact with and be identified by
the sequencing system.
Sequencing by
ligation doesn’t
utilize DNA
polymerase to
create a second
strand. DNA ligase’s
sensitivity to basepairing mismatches
is exploited instead.
The fluorescence
produced is used
to determine the
target sequence.
Digital images taken
after each reaction
are then used for
analysis.
Pyrosequencing
detects the
generation of
pyrophosphates
and light release to
determine whether
a specific base has
been incorporated
in a DNA chain.
Proton detection
sequencing counts
the hydrogen
ions that are
released when
DNA polymerizes.
pH changes are
detected by
semiconductorbased sensor
chips and are then
converted to digital
readouts.
Reversible
terminator
sequencing
utilizes ‘’bridgeamplification’’.
During synthesis,
fragments bind to
oligonucleotides
on the flow cell,
creating a bridge
from one side of
the sequence to
the other, which
is then amplified.
The fluorescently
labeled nucleotides
that are added
during this process
are detected using
direct imaging.