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. 2016 Mar;13(1):19–40. doi: 10.28092/j.issn.2095-3941.2016.0007

Table2.

Advantages and disadvantages of DNA sequencing

Method Basic technique Advantages Disadvantages Reference
Sanger-chain termination method (first generation sequencing) Fluorescent dye-labeled bases; DNA fragments separated by capillary electrophoresis High sensitivity, gold standard complete sequence Very time consuming; cannot detect deletions, translocations or copy number changes 133-136
Pyrosequencing-sequencing by synthesis method Chemiluminescent detection; DNA polymerase synthesizes cDNA to a target template; pyrophosphate release is detected at each base addition More sensitive than Sanger; provides % of mutated vs. wild-type DNA; works well with fragmented DNA Short read length limits technique to hot spots. Limited accuracy at detecting changes in homopolymer runs. Scalability is limited compared with other NGS methods 136-140
Allele-specific RT-PCR Primers span DNA sites of interest and probes detect specific mutations Very high sensitivity widely used for clinical testing for oncogene mutations in CRC and NSCLC Scalability constraints limit application to hot spots 136,141-143
RT-PCR melting curve analysis Heterogeneous DNA PCR products melt at different temperatures than homogenous DNA/PCR products High sensitivity provides percentage of mutated versus wild-type DNA Often difficult to resolve differences in melt curves. Difficult to standardize. Multiplex capability is limited 136,144