Identification of high-confidence human poly(A) RNA isoform scaffolds using nanopore sequencing
- Logan Mulroney1,4,
- Madalee G. Wulf2,4,
- Ira Schildkraut2,
- George Tzertzinis2,
- John Buswell2,
- Miten Jain1,
- Hugh Olsen1,
- Mark Diekhans3,
- Ivan R. Corrêa Jr.2,
- Mark Akeson1 and
- Laurence Ettwiller2
- 1Biomolecular Engineering Department, UC Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
- 2New England Biolabs, Ipswich, Massachusetts 01938, USA
- 3Genomics Institute, UC Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
- Corresponding authors: makeson{at}soe.ucsc.edu, ettwiller{at}neb.com, correa{at}neb.com
Abstract
Nanopore sequencing devices read individual RNA strands directly. This facilitates identification of exon linkages and nucleotide modifications; however, using conventional direct RNA nanopore sequencing, the 5′ and 3′ ends of poly(A) RNA cannot be identified unambiguously. This is due in part to RNA degradation in vivo and in vitro that can obscure transcription start and end sites. In this study, we aimed to identify individual full-length human RNA isoforms among ∼4 million nanopore poly(A)-selected RNA reads. First, to identify RNA strands bearing 5′ m7G caps, we exchanged the biological cap for a modified cap attached to a 45-nt oligomer. This oligomer adaptation method improved 5′ end sequencing and ensured correct identification of the 5′ m7G capped ends. Second, among these 5′-capped nanopore reads, we screened for features consistent with a 3′ polyadenylation site. Combining these two steps, we identified 294,107 individual high-confidence full-length RNA scaffolds from human GM12878 cells, most of which (257,721) aligned to protein-coding genes. Of these, 4876 scaffolds indicated unannotated isoforms that were often internal to longer, previously identified RNA isoforms. Orthogonal data for m7G caps and open chromatin, such as CAGE and DNase-HS seq, confirmed the validity of these high-confidence RNA scaffolds.
Keywords
- RNA
- transcriptomics
- nanopore
- direct RNA
- single-molecule
- full-length
- transcription start site
- RNA isoforms
- Received February 3, 2021.
- Accepted October 13, 2021.
This article, published in RNA, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.










