Optimizing experimental design for genome sequencing and assembly with Oxford Nanopore Technologies Article

Sutton, JM, Millwood, JD, McCormack, AC et al. (2021). Optimizing experimental design for genome sequencing and assembly with Oxford Nanopore Technologies . 2021 10.46471/gigabyte.27

cited authors

  • Sutton, JM; Millwood, JD; McCormack, AC; Fierst, JL

authors

abstract

  • High quality reference genome sequences are the core of modern genomics. Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) produces inexpensive DNA sequences, but has high error rates, which make sequence assembly and analysis difficult as genome size and complexity increases. Robust experimental design is necessary for ONT genome sequencing and assembly, but few studies have addressed eukaryotic organisms. Here, we present novel results using simulated and empirical ONT and DNA libraries to identify best practices for sequencing and assembly for several model species. We find that the unique error structure of ONT libraries causes errors to accumulate and assembly statistics plateau as sequence depth increases. High-quality assembled eukaryotic sequences require high-molecular-weight DNA extractions that increase sequence read length, and computational protocols that reduce error through pre-assembly correction and read selection. Our quantitative results will be helpful for researchers seeking guidance for de novo assembly projects.

publication date

  • July 13, 2021

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

volume

  • 2021