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. 2015 Oct 13;4:1062. [Version 1] doi: 10.12688/f1000research.7111.1

Figure 2. Enrichment efficiency decreases with phylogenetic distance.

Figure 2.

Read depth across the genome before (blue, left axis) and after (red, right axis) enrichment with a single-sequence subtype 1a probe set. a. The HCV genome comprises 5’ and 3’ untranslated regions (UTRs) and a large central segment encoding a single polyprotein that is cleaved into ten proteins. b. A subtype 1a sample enriched with probes derived from its own consensus sequence yields coverage patterns across the genome essentially identical to metagenomic sequencing. c. A distinct subtype 1a sample produces highly similar but non-identical patterns of pre- and post-enrichment genomic coverage. d. A subtype 1b sample yields low read depths at loci that are relatively divergent from the 1a probe sequence (E1, E2, NS2 and NS5a). e. Sequence capture of a sample from a different genotype, 3a, is poor across large segments of the genome. f. Heat map representing average diversity (calculated as Shannon entropy) among 165 HCV reference genomes. Nucleotide diversity varies dramatically across the genome and tracks drops in enrichment efficiency between phylogenetically distinct probe-target combinations.