scholarly journals Partial genome assembly of the medicinal plant Ephedra sinica.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiushi Li ◽  
Jeremy S. Morris ◽  
Peter Facchini ◽  
Sam Yeaman

Ephedra sinica is a high-value medicinal plant that produces important phenylpropylamino alkaloids pseudoephedrine and ephedrine. Few genomics resources exist for E. sinica, which has been characterized as a tetraploid with a monoploid genome size of 8.56 Gb. Here we reported a partial genome assembly of E. sinica (12.8 Gb) based on Illumina short-read sequencing technology at low coverage.

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1847-1847 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Burns ◽  
David Robert Bruce ◽  
Pauline Robbe ◽  
Adele Timbs ◽  
Basile Stamatopoulos ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia (CLL) is the most prevalent leukaemia in the Western world and characterised by clinical heterogeneity. IgHV mutation status, mutations in the TP53 gene and deletions of the p-arm of chromosome 17 are currently used to predict an individual patient's response to therapy and give an indication as to their long-term prognosis. Current clinical guidelines recommend screening patients prior to initial, and any subsequent, treatment. Routine clinical laboratory practices for CLL involve three separate assays, each of which are time-consuming and require significant investment in equipment. Nanopore sequencing offers a rapid, low-cost alternative, generating a full prognostic dataset on a single platform. In addition, Nanopore sequencing also promises low failure rates on degraded material such as FFPE and excellent detection of structural variants due to long read length of sequencing. Importantly, Nanopore technology does not require expensive equipment, is low-maintenance and ideal for patient-near testing, making it an attractive DNA sequencing device for low-to-middle-income countries. Methods Eleven untreated CLL samples were selected for the analysis, harbouring both mutated (n=5) and unmutated (n=6) IgHV genes, seven TP53 mutations (five missense, one stop gain and one frameshift) and two del(17p) events. Primers were designed to amplify all exons of TP53, along with the IgHV locus, and each primer included universal tails for individual sample barcoding. The resulting PCR amplicons were prepared for sequencing using a ligation sequencing kit (SQK-LSK108, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Oxford, UK). All IgHV libraries were pooled and sequenced on one R9.4 flowcell, with the TP53 libraries pooled and sequenced on a second R9.4 flowcell. Whole genome libraries were prepared from 400ng genomic DNA for each sample using a rapid sequencing kit (SQK-RAD004, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Oxford, UK), and each sample sequenced on individual flowcells on a MinION mk1b instrument (Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Oxford, UK). We developed a bespoke bioinformatics pipeline to detect copy-number changes, TP53 mutations and IgHV mutation status from the Nanopore sequencing data. Results were compared to short-read sequencing data obtained earlier by targeted deep sequencing (MiSeq, Illumina Inc, San Diego, CA, USA) and whole genome sequencing (HiSeq 2500, Illumina Inc, San Diego CA, USA). Results Following basecalling and adaptor trimming, the raw data were submitted to the IMGT database. In the absence of error correction, it was possible to identify the correct VH family for each sample; however the germline homology was not sufficient to differentiate between IgHVmut and IgHVunmut CLL cases. Following bio-informatic error correction and consensus building, the percentage to germline homology was the same as that obtained from short-read sequencing and nanopore sequencing also called the same productive rearrangements in all cases. A total of 77 TP53 variants were identified, including 68 in non-coding regions, and three synonymous SNVs. The remaining 6 were predicted to be functional variants (eight missense and two stop-gains) and had all been identified in early MiSeq targeted sequencing. However, the frameshift mutation was not called by the analysis pipeline, although it is present in the aligned reads. Using the low-coverage WGS data, we were able to identify del(17p) events, of 19Mb and 20Mb length, in both patients with high confidence. Conclusions Here we demonstrate that characterization of the IgHV locus in CLL cases is possible using the MinION platform, provided sufficient downstream analysis, including error correction, is applied. Furthermore, somatic SNVs in TP53 can be identified, although similar to second generation sequencing, variant calling of small insertions and deletions is more problematic. Identification of del(17p) is possible from low-coverage WGS on the MinION and is inexpensive. Our data demonstrates that Nanopore sequencing can be a viable, patient-near, low-cost alternative to established screening methods, with the potential of diagnostic implementation in resource-poor regions of the world. Disclosures Schuh: Giles, Roche, Janssen, AbbVie: Honoraria.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Fang ◽  
Jiang Hu ◽  
Depeng Wang ◽  
Kai Wang

AbstractBackgroundStructural variants (SVs) in human genomes are implicated in a variety of human diseases. Long-read sequencing delivers much longer read lengths than short-read sequencing and may greatly improve SV detection. However, due to the relatively high cost of long-read sequencing, it is unclear what coverage is needed and how to optimally use the aligners and SV callers.ResultsIn this study, we developed NextSV, a meta-caller to perform SV calling from low coverage long-read sequencing data. NextSV integrates three aligners and three SV callers and generates two integrated call sets (sensitive/stringent) for different analysis purposes. We evaluated SV calling performance of NextSV under different PacBio coverages on two personal genomes, NA12878 and HX1. Our results showed that, compared with running any single SV caller, NextSV stringent call set had higher precision and balanced accuracy (F1 score) while NextSV sensitive call set had a higher recall. At 10X coverage, the recall of NextSV sensitive call set was 93.5% to 94.1% for deletions and 87.9% to 93.2% for insertions, indicating that ~10X coverage might be an optimal coverage to use in practice, considering the balance between the sequencing costs and the recall rates. We further evaluated the Mendelian errors on an Ashkenazi Jewish trio dataset.ConclusionsOur results provide useful guidelines for SV detection from low coverage whole-genome PacBio data and we expect that NextSV will facilitate the analysis of SVs on long-read sequencing data.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neeraja M Krishnan ◽  
Prachi Jain ◽  
Saurabh Gupta ◽  
Arun K Hariharan ◽  
Binay Panda

Neem (Azadirachta indica A. Juss.), an evergreen tree of the Meliaceae family, is known for its medicinal, cosmetic, pesticidal and insecticidal properties. We had previously sequenced and published the draft genome of the plant, using mainly short read sequencing data. In this report, we present an improved genome assembly generated using additional short reads from Illumina and long reads from Pacific Biosciences SMRT sequencer. We assembled short reads and error corrected long reads using Platanus, an assembler designed to perform well for heterozygous genomes. The updated genome assembly (v2.0) yielded 3- and 3.5-fold increase in N50 and N75, respectively; 2.6-fold decrease in the total number of scaffolds; 1.25-fold increase in the number of valid transcriptome alignments; 13.4-fold less mis-assembly and 1.85-fold increase in the percentage repeat, over the earlier assembly (v1.0). The current assembly also maps better to the genes known to be involved in the terpenoid biosynthesis pathway. Together, the data represents an improved assembly of the A. indica genome. The raw data described in this manuscript are submitted to the NCBI Short Read Archive under the accession numbers SRX1074131, SRX1074132, SRX1074133, and SRX1074134 (SRP013453).


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (29) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hatim Almutairi ◽  
Michael D. Urbaniak ◽  
Michelle D. Bates ◽  
Narissara Jariyapan ◽  
Godwin Kwakye-Nuako ◽  
...  

We present the LGAAP computational pipeline, which was successfully used to assemble six genomes of the parasite subfamily Leishmaniinae to chromosome-scale completeness from a combination of long- and short-read sequencing data. LGAAP is open source, and we suggest that it may easily be ported for assembly of any genome of comparable size (∼35 Mb).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yelena Chernyavskaya ◽  
Xiaofei Zhang ◽  
Jinze Liu ◽  
Jessica S. Blackburn

Nanopore sequencing technology has revolutionized the field of genome biology with its ability to generate extra-long reads that can resolve regions of the genome that were previously inaccessible to short-read sequencing platforms. Although long-read sequencing has been used to resolve several vertebrate genomes, a nanopore-based zebrafish assembly has not yet been released. Over 50% of the zebrafish genome consists of difficult to map, highly repetitive, low complexity elements that pose inherent problems for short-read sequencers and assemblers. We used nanopore sequencing to improve upon and resolve the issues plaguing the current zebrafish reference assembly (GRCz11). Our long-read assembly improved the current resolution of the reference genome by identifying 1,697 novel insertions and deletions over 1Kb in length and placing 106 previously unlocalized scaffolds. We also discovered additional sites of retrotransposon integration previously unreported in GRCz11 and observed their expression in adult zebrafish under physiologic conditions, implying they have active mobility in the zebrafish genome and contribute to the ever-changing genomic landscape.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristaps Bebris ◽  
Inese Polaka

AbstractAdvances in sequencing technology have led to an ever increasing amount of available short read sequencing data. This has, consequently, exacerbated the need for efficient and precise classification tools that can be used in the analysis of this data. As it stands, recent years have shown that massive leaps in performance can be achieved when it comes to approaches that are based in heuristics, and alongside these improvements there has been an ever increasing interest in applying deep learning techniques to revolutionize this classification task. We attempt to gather up these approaches and to evaluate their performance in a reproducible fashion to get a better perspective on the current state of deep learning based methods when it comes to the classification of short read sequencing data.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Tang ◽  
Suqun He ◽  
Xun Gong ◽  
Peng Lü ◽  
Rehab H. Taha ◽  
...  

The reference genomes of Bombyx mori (B. mori), Silkworm Knowledge-based database (SilkDB) and SilkBase, have served as the gold standard for nearly two decades. Their use has fundamentally shaped model organisms and accelerated relevant studies on lepidoptera. However, the current reference genomes of B. mori do not accurately represent the full set of genes for any single strain. As new genome-wide sequencing technologies have emerged and the cost of high-throughput sequencing technology has fallen, it is now possible for standard laboratories to perform full-genome assembly for specific strains. Here we present a high-quality de novo chromosome-level genome assembly of a single B. mori with nuclear polyhedrosis virus (BmNPV) resistance through the integration of PacBio long-read sequencing, Illumina short-read sequencing, and Hi-C sequencing. In addition, regular bioinformatics analyses, such as gene family, phylogenetic, and divergence analyses, were performed. The sample was from our unique B. mori species (NB), which has strong inborn resistance to BmNPV. Our genome assembly showed good collinearity with SilkDB and SilkBase and particular regions. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first genome assembly with BmNPV resistance, which should be a more accurate insect model for resistance studies.


2008 ◽  
Vol 24 (15) ◽  
pp. 1729-1730 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. Fejes ◽  
G. Robertson ◽  
M. Bilenky ◽  
R. Varhol ◽  
M. Bainbridge ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 374 (1786) ◽  
pp. 20190097 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashley Byrne ◽  
Charles Cole ◽  
Roger Volden ◽  
Christopher Vollmers

Long-read sequencing holds great potential for transcriptome analysis because it offers researchers an affordable method to annotate the transcriptomes of non-model organisms. This, in turn, will greatly benefit future work on less-researched organisms like unicellular eukaryotes that cannot rely on large consortia to generate these transcriptome annotations. However, to realize this potential, several remaining molecular and computational challenges will have to be overcome. In this review, we have outlined the limitations of short-read sequencing technology and how long-read sequencing technology overcomes these limitations. We have also highlighted the unique challenges still present for long-read sequencing technology and provided some suggestions on how to overcome these challenges going forward. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Single cell ecology’.


2021 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 97-105
Author(s):  
Samuel O. Oyola ◽  
Sonal P. Henson ◽  
Benjamin Nzau ◽  
Elizabeth Kibwana ◽  
Vishvanath Nene

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