BMC Genomics (Aug 2025)

Accurately assembling nanopore sequencing data of highly pathogenic bacteria

  • Christine Thomas,
  • Hanka Brangsch,
  • Valentina Galeone,
  • Martin Hölzer,
  • Manja Marz,
  • Jörg Linde

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-025-11793-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Background Bacterial genome exploration and outbreak analysis rely heavily on robust whole-genome sequencing and bioinformatics analysis. Widely-used genomic methods, such as genotyping and detection of genetic markers demand high sequencing accuracy and precise genome assembly for reliable results. Methods To assess the utility of nanopore sequencing for genotyping highly pathogenic bacteria with low mutation rates, we sequenced six reference strains using Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) R10.4.1 chemistry and Illumina and evaluated different assembly strategies. The publicly available RefSeq assemblies were chosen as the ground truth. Publicly available sequencing data from key foodborne and public-health-related bacterial pathogens were examined to provide a broader context for the analysis. Results While for Bacillus (Ba.) anthracis an almost perfect assembly was achieved, results varied for other species. For Brucella (Br.) spp., the final assemblies comprised five to 46 different nucleotides in comparison to Sanger-sequenced references. For some key foodborne and public-health-related bacterial pathogens (Klebsiella (K.) variicola, Listeria spp., Mycobacterium (M.) tuberculosis, Staphylococcus (Sta.) aureus, and Streptococcus (Str.) pyogenes) perfect genomes were obtained. Enhanced basecalling models have generally improved assembly accuracy, however, for certain species such as Br. abortus, older models have produced higher accuracy. While long-read polishing mainly improves assembly quality with only one round needed, our results indicate that this process may also degrade assembly quality. Overall, 81% of the observed errors in ONT assemblies were located within coding sequences (CDS). Furthermore, we found that methylation caused 6.5% of the errors, and the bacterial methylation-aware medaka polishing model reduced the number of errors linked to methylation. Core-genome Multilocus Sequence Typing (cgMLST) analysis revealed allele differences in Ba. anthracis, Br. abortus, and Francisella (F.) tularensis for some assemblers, although with fewer than five allele differences. In the case of Br. melitensis, some assemblies included five allele differences, whereas for Br. suis the correct cgMLST alleles were observed. Conclusions Assembling nanopore data from pathogenic bacteria vary in quality across different species and methods. However, errors persist in the final assemblies, including within cgMLST loci, influencing the reliability of outbreak predictions. Nevertheless, specific combinations of existing tools can generate perfect genome assemblies from bacterial ONT sequencing data for outbreak analysis without short-read polishing.

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