Abstract
Abstract
Background
In the metagenomic assembly of a microbial community, abundant species are often thought to assemble well given their deeper sequencing coverage. This conjuncture is rarely tested or evaluated in practice. We often do not know how many abundant species are missing and do not have an approach to recover them.
Results
Here, we propose k-mer based and 16S RNA based methods to measure the completeness of metagenome assembly. We show that even with PacBio high-fidelity (HiFi) reads, abundant species are often not assembled, as high strain diversity may lead to fragmented contigs. We develop a novel reference-free algorithm to recover abundant metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) by identifying circular assembly subgraphs. Complemented with a reference-free genome binning heuristics based on dimension reduction, the proposed method rescues many abundant species that would be missing with existing methods and produces competitive results compared to those state-of-the-art binners in terms of total number of near-complete genome bins.
Conclusions
Our work emphasizes the importance of metagenome completeness, which has often been overlooked. Our algorithm generates more circular MAGs and moves a step closer to the complete representation of microbial communities.
Funder
National Human Genome Research Institute
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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