Abstract

While recently developed short-read sequencing technologies may dramatically reduce the sequencing cost and eventually achieve the $1000 goal for re-sequencing, their limitations prevent the de novo sequencing of eukaryotic genomes with the standard shotgun sequencing protocol. We present SHRAP (SHort Read Assembly Protocol), a sequencing protocol and assembly methodology that utilizes high-throughput short-read technologies. We describe a variation on hierarchical sequencing with two crucial differences: (1) we select a clone library from the genome randomly rather than as a tiling path and (2) we sample clones from the genome at high coverage and reads from the clones at low coverage. We assume that 200 bp read lengths with a 1% error rate and inexpensive random fragment cloning on whole mammalian genomes is feasible. Our assembly methodology is based on first ordering the clones and subsequently performing read assembly in three stages: (1) local assemblies of regions significantly smaller than a clone size, (2) clone-sized assemblies of the results of stage 1, and (3) chromosome-sized assemblies. By aggressively localizing the assembly problem during the first stage, our method succeeds in assembling short, unpaired reads sampled from repetitive genomes. We tested our assembler using simulated reads from D. melanogaster and human chromosomes 1, 11, and 21, and produced assemblies with large sets of contiguous sequence and a misassembly rate comparable to other draft assemblies. Tested on D. melanogaster and the entire human genome, our clone-ordering method produces accurate maps, thereby localizing fragment assembly and enabling the parallelization of the subsequent steps of our pipeline. Thus, we have demonstrated that truly inexpensive de novo sequencing of mammalian genomes will soon be possible with high-throughput, short-read technologies using our methodology.

Highlights

  • Sequencing technology has come a long way since Sanger first introduced shotgun sequencing and assembly as a methodology for sequencing entire genomes [1]

  • The SHRAP sequencing protocol is a variation on hierarchical sequencing which we believe has great potential for automation and parallelization

  • As in hierarchical sequencing, we sample reads from each clone to a particular coverage, being careful to label each read with its particular clone of origin

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Summary

Introduction

Sequencing technology has come a long way since Sanger first introduced shotgun sequencing and assembly as a methodology for sequencing entire genomes [1]. Hierarchical sequencing relies on clustering reads into small local sets that represent the sequence of one clone, where most of the repeats have a unique copy and assembly is straight-forward. This technique was used to sequence several genomes including those of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae [17,18], Caenorhabditis elegans [19], and human [20]. In the rat genome project, the Baylor Genome Center used a hybrid method that combined elements of wholegenome shotgun sequencing with hierarchical sequencing [24]

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