Plasmids are critical tools in modern life sciences, from gene therapy and mRNA vaccines to synthetic biology and recombinant protein production. Typical plasmids (2–15 kb) carry essential elements like origins of replication, antibiotic resistance genes, and cloning sites.
Ensuring full-sequence accuracy and structural integrity is essential, especially when plasmids serve as starting materials for biopharmaceutical products. With increasing regulatory expectations, reliable full-length plasmid sequencing is becoming the new standard for quality control.

Limitations of Traditional Plasmid Verification
Many laboratories still rely on partial sequencing using Sanger sequencing to verify cloning sites or inserts. While highly accurate, this method typically covers only small regions of the plasmid sequence. As a result, mutations or structural variations elsewhere in the plasmid backbone may remain undetected.
|
Challenge |
Impact |
|
Partial sequence coverage |
Backbone mutations may remain undetected |
|
Hidden mutations |
Insertions or deletions may occur during cloning |
|
Structural variations |
Rearrangements may arise during amplification |
|
Reproducibility risks |
Undetected mutations can affect downstream experiments |
A recent analysis of 2,521 plasmids from academic and industrial laboratories found that a notable proportion contained unexpected sequence variations, highlighting the importance of complete plasmid validation.
Why Full Plasmid Sequencing Matters
Full plasmid sequencing provides comprehensive coverage of both the plasmid backbone and inserted fragments, offering a more reliable way to validate plasmid constructs.
|
Feature |
Sanger Sequencing |
NGS Sequencing |
Third-Generation Sequencing(TGS) |
|
Principle |
Dideoxy chain termination |
Sequencing-by-synthesis |
Nanopore or single-molecule fluorescence |
|
Read Length |
700–1000 bp |
50–300 bp |
10 kb to Mb scale |
|
Throughput |
Low |
Very high |
Medium to high |
|
Accuracy |
Very high (<0.1%) |
High (<0.1%, coverage dependent) |
Raw error higher but correctable |
|
Time |
Slow (hours per sample) |
Moderate |
Fast, real-time output |
|
Cost |
High per sample |
Low per sample |
Higher per run |
Strategic recommendations:
- Routine validation: Use Sanger Sequencing or NGS.
- Complex plasmids (e.g., with repeats, high GC, or large inserts): Require long-read sequencing (e.g., ONT or PacBio).
- In-depth research analysis: Combine NGS&TGS—use long reads for scaffolding and structural insight, and short reads for high-fidelity variant correction.
Yeasen’s Rapid, Cost-Efficient Full Plasmid Sequencing Solution
Yeasen Biotechnology offers HieffTM LongSeq Plasmid Fragmentation & Ligation Module + HieffTM Adapter Ligation Module for ONT, combined with 192+ barcodes, enabling fast, reliable, and high-throughput multiplexed plasmid library prep. Researchers can now verify multiple plasmids simultaneously with reduced hands-on time.

Case Study 1: Full-Length Plasmid Sequencing (Nanopore Platform)
Experimental setup:
Plasmids of various types were prepared using Yeasen Full-Length Plasmid Library Prep Kit (13305ES) combined with the Motor Protein Adapter Module (13304ES) and ONT-compatible barcodes (13317ES / 13318ES). Libraries were sequenced on an ONT sequencer to assess full-length plasmid coverage.
Table: Full-Length Plasmid Sequencing Results on ONT Platform
|
Template |
Input DNA |
Library Recovery |
ONT Sequencing Yield (G) |
Reads Mean Length |
Reads N50 Length |
|
Plasmid1(PUC19) |
100 ng |
>60% |
0.12 G |
1,978 |
2,674 |
|
Plasmid2(PUC19) |
100 ng |
>60% |
0.12 G |
1,928 |
2,673 |
|
Plasmid3 |
150 ng |
>60% |
0.19 G |
2,586 |
4,231 |
|
Plasmid4 |
150 ng |
>60% |
0.18 G |
2,759 |
4,554 |
|
Plasmid5 |
150 ng |
>60% |
0.20 G |
2,577 |
4,456 |
|
Plasmid6 |
150 ng |
>60% |
0.24 G |
2,492 |
4,055 |
|
Plasmid7 |
150 ng |
>60% |
0.17 G |
2,808 |
4,697 |
|
Plasmid8 |
150 ng |
>60% |
0.20 G |
2,876 |
4,613 |

Figure: Fragment length distribution after full-length plasmid sequencing

Figure: Representative full-length plasmid sequences obtained
Case Study 2: Full-Length Sequencing of AAV Plasmids
Experimental setup:
AAV plasmids were sequenced using Yeasen 13305 + 13317/13318 reagents and compared with a competitor (Supplier N*). Libraries were prepared from 200 ng input DNA per plasmid and sequenced on the ONT platform.
Table: Full-Length Sequencing Comparison of AAV Plasmids
|
Reagent |
Template |
Input DNA |
Library Recovery |
ONT Sequencing Yield (G) |
Reads Mean Length |
Reads N50 Length |
|
Yeasen-13305 + 13317/13318 |
Plasmid1 |
200 ng |
>60% |
0.0531 |
3,061 |
3,109 |
|
Plasmid2 |
200 ng |
>60% |
0.0834 |
2,941 |
3,082 |
|
|
Plasmid3 |
200 ng |
>60% |
0.0419 |
3,074 |
3,095 |
|
|
Supplier N* |
Plasmid1 |
200 ng |
>60% |
0.1949 |
3,059 |
3,107 |
|
Plasmid2 |
200 ng |
>60% |
0.0805 |
3,088 |
3,108 |
|
|
Plasmid3 |
200 ng |
>60% |
0.0880 |
3,067 |
3,095 |
Related Products
|
Cat. No. |
Cat.NO. |
Name |
Notes |
|
Plasmid DNA Extraction |
19021ES |
1-10 mL culture |
|
|
19023ES |
30-70 mL culture |
||
|
19037ES |
150-300 mL culture |
||
|
19038ES |
50-200 mL culture |
||
|
Plasmid Library prep |
13305ES |
For library prep |
|
|
13304ES |
Motor protein adapter ligation module. |
||
|
13317–13320ES |
Hieff™ Native Barcode Kit(384 Barcode) |
ONT-compatible native barcodes |
|
|
12418ES |
Purification Beads |
||
|
12642ES |
Qubit Quantitation |
