Hybrid error correction and de novo assembly of single-molecule sequencing reads.


Autoria(s): Koren, S; Schatz, MC; Walenz, BP; Martin, J; Howard, JT; Ganapathy, G; Wang, Z; Rasko, DA; McCombie, WR; Jarvis, ED; Adam M Phillippy
Data(s)

01/07/2012

Formato

693 - 700

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22750884

nbt.2280

Nat Biotechnol, 2012, 30 (7), pp. 693 - 700

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/9301

1546-1696

Relação

Nat Biotechnol

10.1038/nbt.2280

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Single-molecule sequencing instruments can generate multikilobase sequences with the potential to greatly improve genome and transcriptome assembly. However, the error rates of single-molecule reads are high, which has limited their use thus far to resequencing bacteria. To address this limitation, we introduce a correction algorithm and assembly strategy that uses short, high-fidelity sequences to correct the error in single-molecule sequences. We demonstrate the utility of this approach on reads generated by a PacBio RS instrument from phage, prokaryotic and eukaryotic whole genomes, including the previously unsequenced genome of the parrot Melopsittacus undulatus, as well as for RNA-Seq reads of the corn (Zea mays) transcriptome. Our long-read correction achieves >99.9% base-call accuracy, leading to substantially better assemblies than current sequencing strategies: in the best example, the median contig size was quintupled relative to high-coverage, second-generation assemblies. Greater gains are predicted if read lengths continue to increase, including the prospect of single-contig bacterial chromosome assembly.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Algorithms #Bacteria #Bacteriophages #Computational Biology #RNA #Sequence Analysis, RNA #Transcriptome #Zea mays