Testing assembly strategies of Francisella tularensis genomes to infer an evolutionary conservation analysis of genomic structures

BMC Genomics. 2021 Nov 14;22(1):822. doi: 10.1186/s12864-021-08115-x.

Abstract

Background: We benchmarked sequencing technology and assembly strategies for short-read, long-read, and hybrid assemblers in respect to correctness, contiguity, and completeness of assemblies in genomes of Francisella tularensis. Benchmarking allowed in-depth analyses of genomic structures of the Francisella pathogenicity islands and insertion sequences. Five major high-throughput sequencing technologies were applied, including next-generation "short-read" and third-generation "long-read" sequencing methods.

Results: We focused on short-read assemblers, hybrid assemblers, and analysis of the genomic structure with particular emphasis on insertion sequences and the Francisella pathogenicity island. The A5-miseq pipeline performed best for MiSeq data, Mira for Ion Torrent data, and ABySS for HiSeq data from eight short-read assembly methods. Two approaches were applied to benchmark long-read and hybrid assembly strategies: long-read-first assembly followed by correction with short reads (Canu/Pilon, Flye/Pilon) and short-read-first assembly along with scaffolding based on long reads (Unicyler, SPAdes). Hybrid assembly can resolve large repetitive regions best with a "long-read first" approach.

Conclusions: Genomic structures of the Francisella pathogenicity islands frequently showed misassembly. Insertion sequences (IS) could be used to perform an evolutionary conservation analysis. A phylogenetic structure of insertion sequences and the evolution within the clades elucidated the clade structure of the highly conservative F. tularensis.

Keywords: Francisella pathogenicity island; High-throughput sequencing; Hybrid assembly; Illumina HiSeq; Pacific biosciences RS; Illumina MiSeq; Insertion sequences; Ion Torrent’s ion S5; Oxford Nanopore technologies MinION; Short-read assembly.

MeSH terms

  • DNA Transposable Elements
  • Francisella tularensis* / genetics
  • Genome, Bacterial*
  • Genomics
  • High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
  • Phylogeny
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA

Substances

  • DNA Transposable Elements