Abstract

Due to the importance of chicken production and the remarkable influence of the gut microbiota on host health and growth, tens of thousands of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) have been constructed for the chicken gut microbiome. However, due to the limitations of short-read sequencing and assembly technologies, most of these MAGs are far from complete, are of lower quality, and include contaminant reads. We generated 332 Gb of high-fidelity (HiFi) long reads from the 5 chicken intestinal compartments and assembled 461 and 337 microbial genomes, of which 53% and 55% are circular, at the species and strain levels, respectively. For the assembled microbial genomes, approximately 95% were regarded as complete according to the "RNA complete" criteria, which requires at least 1 full-length ribosomal RNA (rRNA) operon encoding all 3 types of rRNA (16S, 23S, and 5S) and at least 18 copies of full-length transfer RNA genes. In comparison with the short-read-derived chicken MAGs, 384 (83% of 461) and 89 (26% of 337) strain-level and species-level genomes in this study are novel, with no matches to previously reported sequences. At the gene level, one-third of the 2.5 million genes in the HiFi-derived gene catalog are novel and cannot be matched to the short-read-derived gene catalog. Moreover, the HiFi-derived genomes have much higher continuity and completeness, as well as lower contamination; the HiFi-derived gene catalog has a much higher ratio of complete gene structures. The dominant phylum in our HiFi-assembled genomes was Firmicutes (82.5%), and the foregut was highly enriched in 5 genera: Ligilactobacillus, Limosilactobacillus, Lactobacillus, Weissella, and Enterococcus, all of which belong to the order Lactobacillales. Using GTDB-Tk, all 337 species-level genomes were successfully classified at the order level; however, 2, 35, and 189 genomes could not be classified into any known family, genus, and species, respectively. Among these incompletely classified genomes, 9 and 49 may belong to novel genera and species, respectively, because their 16S rRNA genes have identities lower than 95% and 97% to any known 16S rRNA genes. HiFi sequencing not only produced metagenome assemblies and gene structures with markedly improved quality but also recovered a substantial portion of novel genomes and genes that were missed in previous short-read-based metagenome studies. The novel genomes and species obtained in this study will facilitate gut microbiome and host-microbiota interaction studies, thereby contributing to the sustainable development of poultry resources.

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