Abstract
Nanopore sequencing, superior to other sequencing technologies for DNA storage in multiple aspects, has recently attracted considerable attention. Its high error rates, however, demand thorough research on practical and efficient coding schemes to enable accurate recovery of stored data. To this end, we consider a simplified model of a nanopore sequencer inspired by Mao et al., incorporating intersymbol interference and measurement noise. Essentially, our channel model passes a sliding window of length ℓ over a q-ary input sequence that outputs the composition of the enclosed ℓ bits, and shifts by δ positions with each time step. In this context, the composition of a q-ary vector x specifies the number of occurrences in x of each symbol in {0, 1, . . ., q − 1}. The resulting compositions vector, termed the read vector, may also be corrupted by t substitution errors. By employing graph-theoretic techniques, we deduce that for δ = 1, at least log log n symbols of redundancy are required to correct a single (t = 1) substitution. Finally, for ℓ ≥ 3, we exploit some inherent characteristics of read vectors to arrive at an error-correcting code that is of optimal redundancy up to a (small) additive constant for this setting. This construction is also found to be optimal for the case of reconstruction from two noisy read vectors.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 10478160 |
Pages (from-to) | 4956-4967 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | IEEE Transactions on Information Theory |
Volume | 70 |
Issue number | 7 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 1 Jul 2024 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- DNA sequences
- Sequence reconstruction
- composition errors
- error-correction codes
- nanopore sequencing
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Information Systems
- Computer Science Applications
- Library and Information Sciences