scholarly journals HyPo: Super Fast & Accurate Polisher for Long Read Genome Assemblies

Author(s):  
Ritu Kundu ◽  
Joshua Casey ◽  
Wing-Kin Sung

ABSTRACTEfforts towards making population-scale long read genome assemblies (especially human genomes) viable have intensified recently with the emergence of many fast assemblers. The reliance of these fast assemblers on polishing for the accuracy of assemblies makes it crucial. We present HyPo–a Hybrid Polisher–that utilises short as well as long reads within a single run to polish a long read assembly of small and large genomes. It exploits unique genomic kmers to selectively polish segments of contigs using partial order alignment of selective read-segments. As demonstrated on human genome assemblies, Hypo generates significantly more accurate polished assemblies in about one-third time with about half the memory requirements in comparison to Racon (the widely used polisher currently).

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kishwar Shafin ◽  
Trevor Pesout ◽  
Ryan Lorig-Roach ◽  
Marina Haukness ◽  
Hugh E. Olsen ◽  
...  

AbstractPresent workflows for producing human genome assemblies from long-read technologies have cost and production time bottlenecks that prohibit efficient scaling to large cohorts. We demonstrate an optimized PromethION nanopore sequencing method for eleven human genomes. The sequencing, performed on one machine in nine days, achieved an average 63x coverage, 42 Kb read N50, 90% median read identity and 6.5x coverage in 100 Kb+ reads using just three flow cells per sample. To assemble these data we introduce new computational tools: Shasta - a de novo long read assembler, and MarginPolish & HELEN - a suite of nanopore assembly polishing algorithms. On a single commercial compute node Shasta can produce a complete human genome assembly in under six hours, and MarginPolish & HELEN can polish the result in just over a day, achieving 99.9% identity (QV30) for haploid samples from nanopore reads alone. We evaluate assembly performance for diploid, haploid and trio-binned human samples in terms of accuracy, cost, and time and demonstrate improvements relative to current state-of-the-art methods in all areas. We further show that addition of proximity ligation (Hi-C) sequencing yields near chromosome-level scaffolds for all eleven genomes.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Istace ◽  
Caroline Belser ◽  
Jean-Marc Aury

ABSTRACTMotivationLong read sequencing and Bionano Genomics optical maps are two techniques that, when used together, make it possible to reconstruct entire chromosome or chromosome arms structure. However, the existing tools are often too conservative and organization of contigs into scaffolds is not always optimal.ResultsWe developed BiSCoT (Bionano SCaffolding COrrection Tool), a tool that post-processes files generated during a Bionano scaffolding in order to produce an assembly of greater contiguity and quality. BiSCoT was tested on a human genome and four publicly available plant genomes sequenced with Nanopore long reads and improved significantly the contiguity and quality of the assemblies. BiSCoT generates a fasta file of the assembly as well as an AGP file which describes the new organization of the input assembly.AvailabilityBiSCoT and improved assemblies are freely available on Github at http://www.genoscope.cns.fr/biscot and Pypi at https://pypi.org/project/biscot/.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Di Genova ◽  
Elena Buena-Atienza ◽  
Stephan Ossowski ◽  
Marie-France Sagot

The continuous improvement of long-read sequencing technologies along with the development of ad-doc algorithms has launched a new de novo assembly era that promises high-quality genomes. However, it has proven difficult to use only long reads to generate accurate genome assemblies of large, repeat-rich human genomes. To date, most of the human genomes assembled from long error-prone reads add accurate short reads to further polish the consensus quality. Here, we report the development of a novel algorithm for hybrid assembly, WENGAN, and the de novo assembly of four human genomes using a combination of sequencing data generated on ONT PromethION, PacBio Sequel, Illumina and MGI technology. WENGAN implements efficient algorithms that exploit the sequence information of short and long reads to tackle assembly contiguity as well as consensus quality. The resulting genome assemblies have high contiguity (contig NG50:16.67-62.06 Mb), few assembly errors (contig NGA50:10.9-45.91 Mb), good consensus quality (QV:27.79-33.61), and high gene completeness (BUSCO complete: 94.6-95.1%), while consuming low computational resources (CPU hours:153-1027). In particular, the WENGAN assembly of the haploid CHM13 sample achieved a contig NG50 of 62.06 Mb (NGA50:45.91 Mb), which surpasses the contiguity of the current human reference genome (GRCh38 contig NG50:57.88 Mb). Providing highest quality at low computational cost, WENGAN is an important step towards the democratization of the de novo assembly of human genomes. The WENGAN assembler is available at https://github.com/adigenova/wengan


PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e10150
Author(s):  
Benjamin Istace ◽  
Caroline Belser ◽  
Jean-Marc Aury

Motivation Long read sequencing and Bionano Genomics optical maps are two techniques that, when used together, make it possible to reconstruct entire chromosome or chromosome arms structure. However, the existing tools are often too conservative and organization of contigs into scaffolds is not always optimal. Results We developed BiSCoT (Bionano SCaffolding COrrection Tool), a tool that post-processes files generated during a Bionano scaffolding in order to produce an assembly of greater contiguity and quality. BiSCoT was tested on a human genome and four publicly available plant genomes sequenced with Nanopore long reads and improved significantly the contiguity and quality of the assemblies. BiSCoT generates a fasta file of the assembly as well as an AGP file which describes the new organization of the input assembly. Availability BiSCoT and improved assemblies are freely available on GitHub at http://www.genoscope.cns.fr/biscot and Pypi at https://pypi.org/project/biscot/.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marc Aury ◽  
Benjamin Istace

Abstract Single-molecule sequencing technologies have recently been commercialized by Pacific Biosciences and Oxford Nanopore with the promise of sequencing long DNA fragments (kilobases to megabases order) and then, using efficient algorithms, provide high quality assemblies in terms of contiguity and completeness of repetitive regions. However, the error rate of long-read technologies is higher than that of short-read technologies. This has a direct consequence on the base quality of genome assemblies, particularly in coding regions where sequencing errors can disrupt the coding frame of genes. In the case of diploid genomes, the consensus of a given gene can be a mixture between the two haplotypes and can lead to premature stop codons. Several methods have been developed to polish genome assemblies using short reads and generally, they inspect the nucleotide one by one, and provide a correction for each nucleotide of the input assembly. As a result, these algorithms are not able to properly process diploid genomes and they typically switch from one haplotype to another. Herein we proposed Hapo-G (Haplotype-Aware Polishing Of Genomes), a new algorithm capable of incorporating phasing information from high-quality reads (short or long-reads) to polish genome assemblies and in particular assemblies of diploid and heterozygous genomes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Songbo Wang ◽  
Jiadong Lin ◽  
Xiaofei Yang ◽  
Zihang Li ◽  
Tun Xu ◽  
...  

Integration of Hepatitis B (HBV) virus into human genome disrupts genetic structures and cellular functions. Here, we conducted multiplatform long read sequencing on two cell lines and five clinical samples of HBV-induced hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC). We resolved two types of complex viral integration induced genome rearrangements and established a Time-phased Integration and Rearrangement Model (TIRM) to depict their formation progress by differentiating inserted HBV copies with HiFi long reads. We showed that the two complex types were initialized from focal replacements and the fragile virus-human junctions triggered subsequent rearrangements. We further revealed that these rearrangements promoted a prevalent loss-of-heterozygosity at chr4q, accounting for 19.5% of HCC samples in ICGC cohort and contributing to immune and metabolic dysfunction. Overall, our long read based analysis reveals a novel sequential rearrangement progress driven by HBV integration, hinting the structural and functional implications on human genomes.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Sovic ◽  
Mile Sikic ◽  
Andreas Wilm ◽  
Shannon Nicole Fenlon ◽  
Swaine Chen ◽  
...  

Exploiting the power of nanopore sequencing requires the development of new bioinformatics approaches to deal with its specific error characteristics. We present the first nanopore read mapper (GraphMap) that uses a read-funneling paradigm to robustly handle variable error rates and fast graph traversal to align long reads with speed and very high precision (>95%). Evaluation on MinION sequencing datasets against short and long-read mappers indicates that GraphMap increases mapping sensitivity by at least 15-80%. GraphMap alignments are the first to demonstrate consensus calling with <1 error in 100,000 bases, variant calling on the human genome with 76% improvement in sensitivity over the next best mapper (BWA-MEM), precise detection of structural variants from 100bp to 4kbp in length and species and strain-specific identification of pathogens using MinION reads. GraphMap is available open source under the MIT license at https://github.com/isovic/graphmap.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Di Genova ◽  
Gonzalo A. Ruz ◽  
Marie-France Sagot ◽  
Alejandro Maass

ABSTRACTLong read sequencing technologies are the ultimate solution for genome repeats, allowing near reference level reconstructions of large genomes. However, long read de novo assembly pipelines are computationally intense and require a considerable amount of coverage, thereby hindering their broad application to the assembly of large genomes. Alternatively, hybrid assembly methods which combine short and long read sequencing technologies can reduce the time and cost required to produce de novo assemblies of large genomes. In this paper, we propose a new method, called FAST-SG, which uses a new ultra-fast alignment-free algorithm specifically designed for constructing a scaffolding graph using light-weight data structures. FAST-SG can construct the graph from either short or long reads. This allows the reuse of efficient algorithms designed for short read data and permits the definition of novel modular hybrid assembly pipelines. Using comprehensive standard datasets and benchmarks, we show how FAST-SG outperforms the state-of-the-art short read aligners when building the scaffolding graph, and can be used to extract linking information from either raw or error-corrected long reads. We also show how a hybrid assembly approach using FAST-SG with shallow long read coverage (5X) and moderate computational resources can produce long-range and accurate reconstructions of the genomes of Arabidopsis thaliana (Ler-0) and human (NA12878).


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitchell R. Vollger ◽  
Glennis A. Logsdon ◽  
Peter A. Audano ◽  
Arvis Sulovari ◽  
David Porubsky ◽  
...  

AbstractThe sequence and assembly of human genomes using long-read sequencing technologies has revolutionized our understanding of structural variation and genome organization. We compared the accuracy, continuity, and gene annotation of genome assemblies generated from either high-fidelity (HiFi) or continuous long-read (CLR) datasets from the same complete hydatidiform mole human genome. We find that the HiFi sequence data assemble an additional 10% of duplicated regions and more accurately represent the structure of tandem repeats, as validated with orthogonal analyses. As a result, an additional 5 Mbp of pericentromeric sequences are recovered in the HiFi assembly, resulting in a 2.5-fold increase in the NG50 within 1 Mbp of the centromere (HiFi 480.6 kbp, CLR 191.5 kbp). Additionally, the HiFi genome assembly was generated in significantly less time with fewer computational resources than the CLR assembly. Although the HiFi assembly has significantly improved continuity and accuracy in many complex regions of the genome, it still falls short of the assembly of centromeric DNA and the largest regions of segmental duplication using existing assemblers. Despite these shortcomings, our results suggest that HiFi may be the most effective stand-alone technology for de novo assembly of human genomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Belser ◽  
Franc-Christophe Baurens ◽  
Benjamin Noel ◽  
Guillaume Martin ◽  
Corinne Cruaud ◽  
...  

AbstractLong-read technologies hold the promise to obtain more complete genome assemblies and to make them easier. Coupled with long-range technologies, they can reveal the architecture of complex regions, like centromeres or rDNA clusters. These technologies also make it possible to know the complete organization of chromosomes, which remained complicated before even when using genetic maps. However, generating a gapless and telomere-to-telomere assembly is still not trivial, and requires a combination of several technologies and the choice of suitable software. Here, we report a chromosome-scale assembly of a banana genome (Musa acuminata) generated using Oxford Nanopore long-reads. We generated a genome coverage of 177X from a single PromethION flowcell with near 17X with reads longer than 75 kbp. From the 11 chromosomes, 5 were entirely reconstructed in a single contig from telomere to telomere, revealing for the first time the content of complex regions like centromeres or clusters of paralogous genes.


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