Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) library preparation is a critical process that transforms DNA or cDNA samples into a library of fragments compatible with sequencing platforms. Among the essential steps in this workflow are fragmentation, end repair, and dA-tailing, each ensuring DNA fragments are properly prepared for adapter ligation and subsequent sequencing.
Fragmentation
Fragmentation involves breaking the input DNA into smaller, uniformly sized pieces suitable for sequencing. This can be achieved by physical methods like sonication or nebulization, enzymatic digestion, or chemical fragmentation. The goal is to generate fragments typically ranging from 200 to 600 base pairs, compatible with the sequencing technology’s read length and throughput. Controlled fragmentation enables comprehensive genome coverage and efficient cluster generation in platforms like Illumina sequencers.
End Repair
DNA fragmentation produces fragments with heterogeneous ends—such as 3’-overhangs, 5’-overhangs, blunt ends, or damaged termini—that must be enzymatically processed into uniform blunt ends. End repair uses a combination of enzymatic activities including polymerases to fill in 5’ overhangs, exonucleases to remove 3’ overhangs, and kinases (like polynucleotide kinase) to phosphorylate the 5’ ends. The resulting blunt-ended fragments with 5’-phosphate and 3’-hydroxyl groups provide substrates optimal for the next step of adapter ligation.
dA-Tailing (Adenylation)
After end repair, an A-overhang (single adenine nucleotide) is enzymatically added to the 3’ ends of the blunt DNA fragments in a process called dA-tailing or adenylation. This step is facilitated by a terminal transferase or polymerase with terminal transferase activity, which adds a single deoxyadenosine residue. It prepares the DNA fragments for ligation to adapters with complementary 3’ thymine (T) overhangs, enabling directional and efficient ligation while minimizing adapter self-ligation or concatemer formation.
Integration into Library Preparation
These three steps ensure that fragmented DNA is chemically and structurally uniform, which is vital for high-efficiency adapter ligation and library complexity. The quality of fragmentation, precision of end repair, and efficiency of dA-tailing directly affect sequencing library yield, diversity, and data quality. Proper enzymatic treatments minimize sequencing bias and maximize effective cluster formation and sequencing accuracy.
Fragmentation, end repair, and dA-tailing are foundational enzymatic and physical treatments that convert input genomic DNA into sequencing-ready libraries in NGS workflows. Controlled fragmentation generates appropriately sized DNA fragments; end repair creates uniform blunt-ended fragments with phosphorylated termini; and dA-tailing adds a critical adenine overhang for efficient adapter ligation. These coordinated steps are essential for generating high-quality NGS data and are widely adopted across sequencing platforms.





