Telomere-to-telomere assembly of a complete human X chromosome
Author:
Miga Karen H.ORCID, Koren SergeyORCID, Rhie ArangORCID, Vollger Mitchell R.ORCID, Gershman Ariel, Bzikadze Andrey, Brooks Shelise, Howe Edmund, Porubsky David, Logsdon Glennis A., Schneider Valerie A., Potapova Tamara, Wood Jonathan, Chow William, Armstrong Joel, Fredrickson Jeanne, Pak Evgenia, Tigyi Kristof, Kremitzki Milinn, Markovic Christopher, Maduro Valerie, Dutra Amalia, Bouffard Gerard G., Chang Alexander M., Hansen Nancy F., Thibaud-Nissen Françoisen, Schmitt Anthony D., Belton Jon-Matthew, Selvaraj Siddarth, Dennis Megan Y., Soto Daniela C., Sahasrabudhe Ruta, Kaya Gulhan, Quick Josh, Loman Nicholas J., Holmes Nadine, Loose Matthew, Surti Urvashi, Risques Rosa ana, Graves Lindsay Tina A., Fulton Robert, Hall Ira, Paten Benedict, Howe Kerstin, Timp WinstonORCID, Young Alice, Mullikin James C.ORCID, Pevzner Pavel A., Gerton Jennifer L.ORCID, Sullivan Beth A., Eichler Evan E.ORCID, Phillippy Adam M.ORCID
Abstract
After nearly two decades of improvements, the current human reference genome (GRCh38) is the most accurate and complete vertebrate genome ever produced. However, no one chromosome has been finished end to end, and hundreds of unresolved gaps persist 1,2. The remaining gaps include ribosomal rDNA arrays, large near-identical segmental duplications, and satellite DNA arrays. These regions harbor largely unexplored variation of unknown consequence, and their absence from the current reference genome can lead to experimental artifacts and hide true variants when re-sequencing additional human genomes. Here we present a de novo human genome assembly that surpasses the continuity of GRCh38 2, along with the first gapless, telomere-to-telomere assembly of a human chromosome. This was enabled by high-coverage, ultra-long-read nanopore sequencing of the complete hydatidiform mole CHM13 genome, combined with complementary technologies for quality improvement and validation. Focusing our efforts on the human X chromosome 3, we reconstructed the ∼2.8 megabase centromeric satellite DNA array and closed all 29 remaining gaps in the current reference, including new sequence from the human pseudoautosomal regions and cancer-testis ampliconic gene families (CT-X and GAGE). This complete chromosome X, combined with the ultra-long nanopore data, also allowed us to map methylation patterns across complex tandem repeats and satellite arrays for the first time. These results demonstrate that finishing the human genome is now within reach and will enable ongoing efforts to complete the remaining human chromosomes.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
47 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|