De novo whole-genome assembly of a wild type yeast isolate using nanopore sequencing

The introduction of the MinION sequencing device by Oxford Nanopore Technologies may greatly accelerate whole genome sequencing. Nanopore sequence data offers great potential for assembly of complex genomes without using other technologies. Furthermore, Nanopore data combined with other sequencing t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inF1000 research Vol. 6; p. 618
Main Authors Liem, Michael, Jansen, Hans J, Dirks, Ron P, Henkel, Christiaan V, van Heusden, G Paul H, Lemmers, Richard J L F, Omer, Trifa, Shao, Shuai, Punt, Peter J, Spaink, Herman P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 2017
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Summary:The introduction of the MinION sequencing device by Oxford Nanopore Technologies may greatly accelerate whole genome sequencing. Nanopore sequence data offers great potential for assembly of complex genomes without using other technologies. Furthermore, Nanopore data combined with other sequencing technologies is highly useful for accurate annotation of all genes in the genome. In this manuscript we used nanopore sequencing as a tool to classify yeast strains. We compared various technical and software developments for the nanopore sequencing protocol, showing that the R9 chemistry is, as predicted, higher in quality than R7.3 chemistry. The R9 chemistry is an essential improvement for assembly of the extremely AT-rich mitochondrial genome. We double corrected assemblies from four different assemblers with PILON and assessed sequence correctness before and after PILON correction with a set of 290 Fungi genes using BUSCO. In this study, we used this new technology to sequence and assemble the genome of a recently isolated ethanologenic yeast strain, and compared the results with those obtained by classical Illumina short read sequencing. This strain was originally named ( ) based on ribosomal RNA sequencing. We show that the assembly using nanopore data is much more contiguous than the assembly using short read data. We also compared various technical and software developments for the nanopore sequencing protocol, showing that nanopore-derived assemblies provide the highest contiguity. The mitochondrial and chromosomal genome sequences showed that our strain is clearly distinct from other yeast taxons and most closely related to published species. In conclusion, MinION-mediated long read sequencing can be used for high quality assembly of new eukaryotic microbial genomes.
ISSN:2046-1402
2046-1402
DOI:10.12688/f1000research.11146.1