In recent years, second-generation sequencing (NGS) has rapidly shortened turnaround times and continues to dominate the market with its short-read technology. Yet since 2008, third-generation sequencing (TGS) has gained strong momentum. With its unique long-read capability and the ability to sequence single DNA molecules without PCR amplification, TGS opens new possibilities in genome assembly, pathogen research, and mutation detection.

Figure 1. Development of sequencing technology
The Principles of Third-Generation Sequencing
Third-generation sequencing, also known as single-molecule sequencing, leverages cutting-edge advances in optics, polymers, and nanotechnology to directly distinguish the signals of individual nucleotides. Unlike short-read platforms, TGS provides a direct readout of long DNA or RNA fragments.

Figure 2 . The Principles of TGS
Why Third-Generation Sequencing Matters
By providing ultra-long reads and direct single-molecule sequencing, TGS overcomes many NGS limitations. Its strengths include:
- Resolving repetitive or complex genomic regions.
- Accurate structural variation detection (insertions, deletions, inversions, CNVs).
- Full-length transcript and isoform sequencing.
- Real-time epigenetic (e.g., methylation) analysis without additional steps.
- Eliminating PCR bias for more native representation of nucleic acids.
Table 1. Comparison of Sequencing Technologies
Feature |
First-Generation (Sanger) |
Second-Generation (NGS) |
Third-Generation (TGS) |
Read Length |
500–1000 bp |
100–300 bp |
10 kb – >100 kb |
Throughput |
Low |
Very High |
Moderate–High |
Accuracy (per base) |
~99.9% |
~99% (Q30 typical) |
Raw ~85–95% (consensus >99%) |
Turnaround Time |
Slow |
Rapid |
Moderate (improving) |
PCR Requirement |
Yes |
Yes |
No (single-molecule sequencing) |
Cost per Base |
High |
Low |
Decreasing, but higher than NGS |
Best Applications |
Gene cloning, small-scale validation |
Whole-genome sequencing, RNA-seq, clinical panels |
De novo genome assembly, structural variants, isoform discovery, epigenetics |
Applications of Third-Generation Sequencing
TGS has already proven transformative in plant/animal genomics, microbiome studies, clinical diagnostics, and oncology research. Long-read TGS platforms are increasingly applied across multiple research and clinical domains, addressing limitations that short-read sequencing cannot easily overcome:
Table 2. Key Application Advantages of TGS
Application |
NGS Limitation |
TGS Advantage |
De Novo Assembly |
Fragmented assemblies |
Near-complete genomes |
Structural Variants |
Misses large SVs |
Accurate SV detection |
Transcriptomics |
Reconstruct isoforms computationally |
Direct isoform sequencing |
Epigenetics |
Needs extra assays |
Direct detection of modifications |
Metagenomics |
Strain-level resolution poor |
High-resolution species profiling |
Clinical Research |
May miss complex events |
Detects rare/complex variants |
DNA/RNA QC for TGS Library Prep
The quality of extracted DNA/RNA is critical for long-read library preparation. Contaminants, degradation, or insufficient fragment length directly impact sequencing performance.
Key QC requirements for TGS library prep:
- Purity: High-purity DNA/RNA free of cross-contamination or protein. Specialized long-fragment extraction kits are recommended.
- Concentration: ≥30 ng/μL.
- Integrity: For DNA, pulsed-field gel analysis should show average fragment size >30 kb; for RNA, RIN ≥8.
- Input amount: DNA ≥1 μg (depending on desired sequencing depth).
- Storage: TE buffer is recommended for long-term storage of high molecular weight gDNA.
Data Quality Metrics in TGS
Unlike NGS, which uses base-calling accuracy metrics such as Q20/Q30, TGS has a different error profile. Single-base accuracy alone is not the best measure of quality. Instead, read length and distribution are more important indicators of library quality.
High-quality libraries → produce longer reads, better coverage, higher consensus accuracy.
Low-quality libraries → yield shorter reads, uneven coverage, and poor data output.
- PacBio QC metrics: Total yield (Gb), Polymerase read length, Insert size, Subread N50
- Oxford Nanopore QC metrics: Total yield (Gb), Average read length, Mean quality score (Q), Read length N50
Longest read length & corresponding Q-score
Yeasen Solutions for Third-Generation Sequencing: Hieff™ DNA Library Prep Kit for ONT(Cat#13301)
At Yeasen, we understand that high-quality long-read sequencing starts with robust library preparation. That’s why we’ve developed a suite of specialized library prep kits optimized for Oxford Nanopore platforms, designed to meet diverse research and clinical needs.
- Our solutions help scientists achieve:
- Reliable long-read library construction.
- Consistent high-yield data outputs.
- Flexible workflows for genomics, transcriptomics, and clinical diagnostics.

Figure 3. Rapid Workflow of Hieff™ DNA Library Prep Kit for ONT
Related Product
Cat. No. |
Name |
Notes |
13301 |
Universal products |
|
13309 |
DNA fragmentation module |
|
12606 |
FFPE DNA treatment |