| Literature DB >> 29025960 |
Maximilian H-W Schmidt1, Alexander Vogel1, Alisandra K Denton1, Benjamin Istace2, Alexandra Wormit1, Henri van de Geest3, Marie E Bolger4, Saleh Alseekh5, Janina Maß4, Christian Pfaff4, Ulrich Schurr4, Roger Chetelat6, Florian Maumus7, Jean-Marc Aury2, Sergey Koren8, Alisdair R Fernie5, Dani Zamir9, Anthony M Bolger1, Björn Usadel10,4.
Abstract
Updates in nanopore technology have made it possible to obtain gigabases of sequence data. Prior to this, nanopore sequencing technology was mainly used to analyze microbial samples. Here, we describe the generation of a comprehensive nanopore sequencing data set with a median read length of 11,979 bp for a self-compatible accession of the wild tomato species Solanum pennellii We describe the assembly of its genome to a contig N50 of 2.5 MB. The assembly pipeline comprised initial read correction with Canu and assembly with SMARTdenovo. The resulting raw nanopore-based de novo genome is structurally highly similar to that of the reference S. pennellii LA716 accession but has a high error rate and was rich in homopolymer deletions. After polishing the assembly with Illumina reads, we obtained an error rate of <0.02% when assessed versus the same Illumina data. We obtained a gene completeness of 96.53%, slightly surpassing that of the reference S. pennellii Taken together, our data indicate that such long read sequencing data can be used to affordably sequence and assemble gigabase-sized plant genomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29025960 PMCID: PMC5774570 DOI: 10.1105/tpc.17.00521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell ISSN: 1040-4651 Impact factor: 11.277