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A practical guide and Galaxy workflow to avoid inter-plasmidic repeat collapse and false gene loss in Unicycler’s hybrid assemblies

GND
1242996451
ORCID
0000-0002-8669-0297
Affiliation
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Schäfer, Lea;
GND
17274184X
Affiliation
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Jehle, Johannes A.;
GND
1059093685
Affiliation
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Kleespies, Regina G.;
GND
1059101742
ORCID
0000-0003-3060-8992
Affiliation
Julius Kühn-Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Wennmann, Jörg T.

Generating complete, high-quality genome assemblies is key for any downstream analysis, such as comparative genomics. For bacterial genome assembly, various algorithms and fully automated pipelines exist, which are free-of-charge and easily accessible. However, these assembly tools often cannot unambiguously resolve a bacterial genome, for example due to the presence of sequence repeat structures on the chromosome or on plasmids. Then, a more sophisticated approach and/or manual curation is needed. Such modifications can be challenging, especially for non-bioinformaticians, because they are generally not considered as a straightforward process. In this study, we propose a standardized approach for manual genome completion focusing on the popular hybrid assembly pipeline Unicycler. The provided Galaxy workflow addresses two weaknesses in Unicycler’s hybrid assemblies: (i) collapse of inter-plasmidic repeats and (ii) false loss of single-copy sequences. To demonstrate and validate how to detect and resolve these assembly errors, we use two genomes from the Bacillus cereus group. By applying the proposed pipeline following an automated assembly, the genome sequence quality can be significantly improved.

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