Abstract
Hybrid genome assembly has emerged as an important technique in bacterial genomics, but cost and labor requirements limit large-scale application. We present Ultraplexing, a method to improve per-sample sequencing cost and hands-on time of Nanopore sequencing for hybrid assembly by at least 50% compared to molecular barcoding while maintaining high assembly quality. Ultraplexing requires the availability of Illumina data and uses inter-sample genetic variability to assign reads to isolates, which obviates the need for molecular barcoding. Thus, Ultraplexing can enable significant sequencing and labor cost reductions in large-scale bacterial genome projects.
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Dilthey, A. T., Meyer, S. A., & Kaasch, A. J. (2020). Ultraplexing: Increasing the efficiency of long-read sequencing for hybrid assembly with k-mer-based multiplexing. Genome Biology, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-020-01974-9
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