scholarly journals Nanopore Sequencing Comes to Plant Genomes

2017 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 2677-2678
Author(s):  
Nancy R. Hofmann
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Ni ◽  
Neng Huang ◽  
Fan Nie ◽  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Zhi Zhang ◽  
...  

AbstractMethylation states of DNA bases can be detected from native Nanopore reads directly. At present, there are many computational methods that can detect 5mCs in CpG contexts accurately by Nanopore sequencing. However, there is currently a lack of methods to detect 5mCs in non-CpG contexts. In this study, we propose a computational pipeline which can detect 5mC sites in both CpG and non-CpG contexts of plant genomes by using Nanopore sequencing. And we sequenced two model plants Arabidopsis thaliana (A. thaliana) and Oryza sativa (O. sativa) by using Nanopore sequencing and bisulfite sequencing. The results of our proposed pipeline in the two plants achieved high correlations with bisulfite sequencing: above 0.98, 0.96, 0.85 for CpG, CHG, and CHH (H indicates A, C or T) motif, respectively. Our proposed pipeline also achieved high performance on Brassica nigra (B. nigra). Experiments also showed that our proposed pipeline can achieve high performance even with low coverage of reads. Moreover, by using Nanopore sequencing, our proposed pipeline is capable of profiling methylation of more cytosines than bisulfite sequencing.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilya Kirov ◽  
Pavel Merkulov ◽  
Sofya Gvaramiya ◽  
Roman Komakhin ◽  
Murad Omarov ◽  
...  

Transposable elements (TEs), which occupy significant portions of most plant genomes, are a major source of genomic novelty, contributing to plant adaptation, speciation and new cultivar production. The often large, complex genomes of plants make identifying TE insertions from short reads challenging, while whole-genome sequencing remains expensive. To expand the toolbox for TE identification in plants, we used the recently developed Cas9-targeted Nanopore sequencing (CANS) approach. Additionally, as no current bioinformatics tools automatically detect TE insertions after CANS, we developed NanoCasTE, a novel pipeline for target TE insertion discovery. We performed CANS of three copies of EVD retrotransposons in wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana and obtained up to 40x coverage of the targets after only a few hours of sequencing on a MinION sequencer. To estimate the ability to detect new TE insertions, we exploited the A. thaliana ddm1 mutant, which has elevated TE activity. Using CANS, we detected 84% of these insertions in ddm1 after generating only 4420 Nanopore reads (0.2x genome coverage), and also unambiguously identified their locations, demonstrating the method's sensitivity. CANS of pooled (~50 plants) ddm1 plants captured >800 EVD insertions, especially in centromeric regions. CANS also identified insertions of a Ty3/Gypsy retrotransposon in the genomes of two Aegilops tauschii plants, a species with a large genome.


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