PLoS Computational Biology (Mar 2023)

Assembling the perfect bacterial genome using Oxford Nanopore and Illumina sequencing

  • Ryan R. Wick,
  • Louise M. Judd,
  • Kathryn E. Holt

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3

Abstract

Read online

A perfect bacterial genome assembly is one where the assembled sequence is an exact match for the organism’s genome—each replicon sequence is complete and contains no errors. While this has been difficult to achieve in the past, improvements in long-read sequencing, assemblers, and polishers have brought perfect assemblies within reach. Here, we describe our recommended approach for assembling a bacterial genome to perfection using a combination of Oxford Nanopore Technologies long reads and Illumina short reads: Trycycler long-read assembly, Medaka long-read polishing, Polypolish short-read polishing, followed by other short-read polishing tools and manual curation. We also discuss potential pitfalls one might encounter when assembling challenging genomes, and we provide an online tutorial with sample data (github.com/rrwick/perfect-bacterial-genome-tutorial).