Main menu

Completing bacterial genome assemblies with multiplex MinION sequencing


Illumina sequencing platforms have enabled widespread bacterial whole genome sequencing. While Illumina data is appropriate for many analyses, its short read length limits its ability to resolve genomic structure. This has major implications for tracking the spread of mobile genetic elements, including those which carry antimicrobial resistance determinants. Fully resolving a bacterial genome requires long-read sequencing such as those generated by Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) platforms. Here we describe our use of the ONT MinION to sequence 12 isolates of Klebsiella pneumoniae on a single flow cell. We assembled each genome using a combination of ONT reads and previously available Illumina reads, and little to no manual intervention was needed to achieve fully resolved assemblies using the Unicycler hybrid assembler. Assembling only ONT reads with Canu was less effective, resulting in fewer resolved genomes and higher error rates even following error correction with Nanopolish. We demonstrate that multiplexed ONT sequencing is a valuable tool for high-throughput bacterial genome finishing. Specifically, we advocate the use of Illumina sequencing as a first analysis step, followed by ONT reads as needed to resolve genomic structure.

Authors: Ryan R. Wick , Louise M. Judd, Claire L. Gorrie, Kathryn E. Holt

入門

MinION Starter Packを購入 ナノポア製品の販売 シークエンスサービスプロバイダー グローバルディストリビューター

お問い合わせ

Intellectual property Cookie policy Corporate reporting Privacy policy Terms & conditions Accessibility

Oxford Nanoporeについて

Contact us 経営陣 メディアリソース & お問い合わせ先 投資家向け Oxford Nanopore社で働く BSI 27001 accreditationBSI 90001 accreditationBSI mark of trust
Japanese flag