Effect of sequence depth and length in long-read assembly of the maize inbred NC358

Author:

Ou Shujun,Liu Jianing,Chougule Kapeel M.,Fungtammasan Arkarachai,Seetharam Arun S.ORCID,Stein Joshua C.,Llaca VictorORCID,Manchanda Nancy,Gilbert Amanda M.,Wei Sharon,Chin Chen-Shan,Hufnagel David E.,Pedersen Sarah,Snodgrass Samantha J.,Fengler Kevin,Woodhouse MargaretORCID,Walenz Brian P.ORCID,Koren SergeyORCID,Phillippy Adam M.ORCID,Hannigan Brett T.,Dawe R. KellyORCID,Hirsch Candice N.ORCID,Hufford Matthew B.ORCID,Ware DoreenORCID

Abstract

AbstractImprovements in long-read data and scaffolding technologies have enabled rapid generation of reference-quality assemblies for complex genomes. Still, an assessment of critical sequence depth and read length is important for allocating limited resources. To this end, we have generated eight assemblies for the complex genome of the maize inbred line NC358 using PacBio datasets ranging from 20 to 75 × genomic depth and with N50 subread lengths of 11–21 kb. Assemblies with ≤30 × depth and N50 subread length of 11 kb are highly fragmented, with even low-copy genic regions showing degradation at 20 × depth. Distinct sequence-quality thresholds are observed for complete assembly of genes, transposable elements, and highly repetitive genomic features such as telomeres, heterochromatic knobs, and centromeres. In addition, we show high-quality optical maps can dramatically improve contiguity in even our most fragmented base assembly. This study provides a useful resource allocation reference to the community as long-read technologies continue to mature.

Funder

National Science Foundation

United States Department of Agriculture | Agricultural Research Service

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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