Improving and correcting the contiguity of long-read genome assemblies of three plant species using optical mapping and chromosome conformation capture data
- Wen-Biao Jiao1,
- Gonzalo Garcia Accinelli2,
- Benjamin Hartwig1,
- Christiane Kiefer1,
- David Baker2,
- Edouard Severing1,
- Eva-Maria Willing1,
- Mathieu Piednoel1,
- Stefan Woetzel1,
- Eva Madrid-Herrero1,
- Bruno Huettel3,
- Ulrike Hümann1,
- Richard Reinhard3,
- Marcus A Koch4,
- Daniel Swan2,
- Bernardo Clavijo2,
- George Coupland1 and
- Korbinian Schneeberger1,5
- 1 Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research;
- 2 Earlham Institute;
- 3 Max Planck-Genome-center Cologne;
- 4 Centre for Organismal Studies (COS) Heidelberg
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: schneeberger{at}mpipz.mpg.de
Abstract
Long-read sequencing can overcome the weaknesses of short reads in the assembly of eukaryotic genomes, however, at present additional scaffolding is needed to achieve chromosome-level assemblies. We generated PacBio long-read data of the genomes of three relatives of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and assembled all three genomes into only a few hundred contigs. To improve the contiguities of these assemblies, we generated BioNano Genomics optical mapping and Dovetail Genomics chromosome conformation capture data for genome scaffolding. Despite their technical differences, optical mapping and chromosome conformation capture performed similarly and doubled N50 values. After improving both integration methods, assembly contiguity reached chromosome-arm-levels. We rigorously assessed the quality of contigs and scaffolds using Illumina mate-pair libraries and genetic map information. This showed that PacBio assemblies have high sequence accuracy but can contain several misassemblies, which join unlinked regions of the genome. Most, but not all of these mis-joints were removed during the integration of the optical mapping and chromosome conformation capture data. Even though none of the centromeres was fully assembled, the scaffolds revealed large parts of some centromeric regions, even including some of the heterochromatic regions, which are not present in gold standard reference sequences.
- Received July 29, 2016.
- Accepted February 2, 2017.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
This manuscript is Open Access.
This article, published in Genome Research, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International license), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.











