Assembling the perfect bacterial genome using Oxford Nanopore and Illumina sequencing

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Abstract

AU A perfect: Pleaseconfirmthatallheadinglevelsarerepresentedcorrectly bacterial genome assembly is one where the assembled : sequence is an exact match for the organism’s genome—each replicon sequence is complete and contains no errors. While this has been difficult to achieve in the past, improvements in long-read sequencing, assemblers, and polishers have brought perfect assemblies within reach. Here, we describe our recommended approach for assembling a bacterial genome to perfection using a combination of Oxford Nanopore Technologies long reads and Illumina short reads: Trycycler long-read assembly, Medaka long-read polishing, Polypolish short-read polishing, followed by other short-read polishing tools and manual curation. We also discuss potential pitfalls one might encounter when assembling challenging genomes, and we provide an online tutorial with sample data (github.com/rrwick/perfect-bacterial-genome-tutorial).

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Wick, R. R., Judd, L. M., & Holt, K. E. (2023). Assembling the perfect bacterial genome using Oxford Nanopore and Illumina sequencing. PLoS Computational Biology, 19(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010905

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