Skip to content

EverymanBio/pestalotiopsis

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

15 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

High-quality genome assembly of a Pestalotiopsis fungi using DIY-friendly Methods

DOI

The following contains the steps used in the assembly, polishing and annotation pipeline for generating the Pestalotiopsis draft genome.

See Phylogenetic Analysis Readme for steps used in phylogeny.

De novo Assembly of Nanopore Sequencing Read Data

Sequencing was performed on the Oxford Nanopore platform and multiple fastq files were emitted from Guppy, the basecalling component of the MinKNOW software package.

The resulting fastq files were merged, gzipped and assembled locally using Flye v2.9-b1768 using a Thinkpad P14s with the following arguments:

flye --nano-hq /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/guppy_sup_output/combined.fastq.gz \
--genome-size=42m \
--out-dir /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/flye \
--threads 16 \
&> /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/flye/flye.out

Error Correction

A 5kb circular contained in contig_11 believed to be unrelated to the source organism was identified and trimmed from the draft assembly. Overlaps were then generated from the truncated assembly and error corrected.

Trimming contig_11 (5kb contig)

  1. Create list of desired contigs without contig_11 > pestalotiopsis/assembly/subseq.lst
contig_4
contig_6
contig_3
contig_8
contig_7
contig_5
contig_9
contig_1
contig_2
contig_10
  1. Use seqkit to create fasta without contig_11
 ./seqtk subseq /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/flye/assembly.fasta \
> /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/subseq.lst \
> /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/flye/assembly_no_contig_11.fasta
  1. Use minimap2 v2.22 to generate overlaps
 ./minimap2 -x map-ont -t 12 \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/flye/assembly_no_contig_11.fasta \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/guppy_sup_output/combined.fastq.gz > \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/minimap2/overlaps.paf
  1. Use racon v.1.4.22 for error correction

Note that the overlaps were gzipped prior to running rakon (e.g. gzip overlaps.paf)

./build/bin/racon -t 16 \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/guppy_sup_output/combined.fastq.gz \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/minimap2/overlaps.paf.gz \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/flye/assembly.fasta > \
/mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/rakon/corrected.fasta

[racon::Polisher::initialize] loaded target sequences 0.173205 s
[racon::Polisher::initialize] loaded sequences 67.255879 s
[racon::Polisher::initialize] loaded overlaps 2.016656 s
[racon::Polisher::initialize] aligning overlaps [====================] 141.591912 s
[racon::Polisher::initialize] transformed data into windows 6.779552 s
[racon::Polisher::polish] generating consensus [====================] 1084.741511 s
[racon::Polisher::] total = 1309.127294 s

Create Consenus Assembly

Finally, medaka v1.4.4 was used to generate the final consensus assembly.

medaka_consensus -i /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/guppy_sup_output/combined.fastq.gz \ 
-d /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/rakon/corrected.fasta \
-o /mnt/e/pestalotiopsis/assembly/medaka

Assembly Annotation

Annotation was performed using liftoff v1.6.1 against reference assembly Pestalotiopsis sp. NC0098 v1.0 genome.

liftoff -g Pestal1_GeneCatalog_20180925.gff3 \
> -o gene_catalog \
> ../ncbi/consensus.fasta \
> Pestal1_AssemblyScaffolds.fasta

Estimating the number of chromosomes

The first step was to determine which contigs contained telomere repeat sequences. Contigs 1, 4, 6, 7, 8 have telomeres at both the start and end of the fasta file, suggesting there are at least 5 telomere-to-telomere chromosomes. Contig 2, 3, 5, 9 do not have any telomeres. Contig 10 is the mitochondrion since it is circularized, 68 kilobases long, and a BLASTN search revealed high identity to previous mitochondrial genomes.

cat assembly.fasta | grep -A 2 -B 1 -n --no-group-separator -E "AACCCTAACCCTAACCCT|AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTT"
1->contig_1
2:CCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAA
3:CCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAA
4-CCCTAAGCTAATATGCTTTTTCGTAGGTAGCCGATATTTCGTAAATTCGGTTTTCGGCGT
5-TATAAAATATAAATAAAGTTTATTTTTTAAATTTATCGTAATCGGTATAAATTATATTAC
68377-TTTTAAAAACAAAACGAGCGGTTTAAATAGCGTTTTTTTTATATCGGCTCGCTTTTATAA
68378:CGGTTTATTAGCTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGG
68379:TTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGG
68380:TTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGAGCAATACGTAACT
68381->contig_3
68382-TGTACTTCGTTCAGTTGCAGCATACTTGCTATTACAGTTCGAAGCAGCCATATTTGTAGC
168492->contig_4
168493:GTTACGTATTGCTCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAA
168494:CCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAA
168495:CCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAAGCTAGCTAGCTAATGATTAAACGAAGGAATTTAAGT
168496-AAAAAAAATACCGTTAATTAATATATAAAAAATAAATAAAAAAAGCTACGCAGTAAAAAC
168497-GCTATTTAAAATTATTTAAAATTATTATTAAAGTATATAAAAATACGTTTATTTATTAAT
316520-AGAGCTCCATTTTGATGGTTGATGTGGCCGGAGGTCGTGGCCACGACTTGCTCGAATTTT
316521:AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGTTAGCTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGCTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGG
316522:GTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGG
316523-GTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGG
316524->contig_5
406562->contig_6
406563:TTCAGTTACGTATTGCTCCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAAC
406564:CCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAAC
406565:CCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAGGCTGATAATTCTTTTTATTAAATTATAATTC
406566-CGGTTATAATTTATTTTTTAAAATTATTATTAAAATTATAATCCCGTTAATAATTATTAA
406567-TAATTATTAATTTTAATTAGTATTTTAATAAGTTTTTTATTTAATAATAATATCCTTGTA
528377-TACTGACTGCTGCATTGACTGTTGTATTCACTGCTGCACTGACTGTTGTACTGACTGCTG
528378:CATTGACTGCTGTATTGACTGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTA
528379:GGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTA
528380:GGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGAGCAATACGTAACTGAACG
528381->contig_7
528382:TACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCT
528383:AACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCT
528384-AAGCTAACCCTAACCCTAATGGTCCTTGGGAGCAGACGCTTGTGGTCTTTTCGTATAGCA
528385-AAAGCTGCTGTGTGATTTCGACTTGCCTAGTTCGGACTCGAATAAGTGGCGATTCCAGAG
625696-AAAATATATCCGATTTAAACGCCGTTAATACGGCCGACCCGGGCTTAAAATTAATTTAAA
625697:AAGTTAATTAGCTTAGGGTTAGGTTAGCTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTT
625698:AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTT
625699:AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGG
625700->contig_8
625701:ACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTA
625702:ACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCTATGCGCGT
625703-ACACGCTGTAAAAAGAAGCGAACCCCGCAAAAAGGCATACCTACCCCAGCCAAGTGGTAC
625704-AGCAATTGTGAATGGTCCAGATAGTAGTTGGCGATAAATGAGCCCTTTGACTAGAAATAA
794422-TTGCAAGAAGATGATTGCAATCTTGGGTGCTTAGAGTTAGCTTAGGGTTAGCTTAGGGTT
794423:AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTT
794424:AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGAGCAATACGTAACTG
794425-AACGAAGTAC

Estimate the number of chromosomes by generating network graphs of all telomere-containing reads

seqtk is used to filter the reads by length, and minimap2 is used to generate all-vs-all overlaps between all telomere-containing reads.

# filter to take only reads that are at least 5 kb long
seqtk seq -L 5000 pest.fastq.gz | gzip > pest_5kb.fastq.gz

# extract telomere-containing reads only
gunzip -c pest_5kb.fastq.gz | grep -A 2 -B 1 --no-group-separator \
-E "AACCCTAACCCTAACCCT|AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTT" - | gzip > telomere_5kb_pest.fastq.gz

# 774 reads pass this filtering. this is about the expected sequencing
# coverage range we expect for anywhere 5-10 chromosomes.

# align all telomere-containing reads against each other.
minimap2 -x ava-ont -t 14 telomere_5kb_pest.fastq.gz telomere_5kb_pest.fastq.gz  > 5kb_overlaps.paf

# filter the overlaps so all overlaps have > 95% query coverage
awk '( ($4 - $3 ) / $2 ) >= 0.95 {print $0}' 5kb_overlaps.paf  > 5kb_overlaps_filt.paf

# this reduces the overlaps from ~ 24k to ~ 6k

Visualize the network graphs in R

The 14 unique highly interconnected network graphs separate perfectly. Each network graph of reads represents a group of reads that all come from a single telomere. Since we expect 2 telomeres per chromosome (one at the start, one at the end, and because DNA was extracted during a haploid life cycle so there is only a single haplotype expected), this suggests that are 14 unique telomeres and 7 chromosomes.

# open the R programming language on the command line
R

library(igraph)

d <- read.table("5kb_overlaps_filt.paf")

# we only need the target and query read names
subset <- data.frame(from=d$V1, to=d$V6)

# create the network graph
g <- graph_from_data_frame(subset)

# extract all sub graphs with a minimum of 10 reads
subgraphs <- decompose.graph(g, min.vertices=10)

# plot all network graphs
pdf("network_graph.pdf", width = 50, height = 50)
par(mfrow=c(3,5))
for (i in seq(subgraphs)) {
    plot(subgraphs[[1]],
         vertex.label=NA,
         vertex.size=15,
         edge.arrow.size=0.1,
         vertex.color=rgb(0.2,0,1, 0.2),
         vertex.frame.color="NA")
}

dev.off()