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Accurate circular consensus long-read sequencing improves variant detection and assembly of a human genome

Aaron M. Wenger
Paul Peluso
William J. Rowell
Richard J. Hall
Gregory T. Concepcion
Jana Ebler
Arkarachai Fungtammasan
Nathan D. Olson
Armin Töpfer
Michael Alonge
Medhat Mahmoud
Yufeng Qian
Chen-Shan Chin
Adam M. Phillippy
Michael C. Schatz
Gene Myers
Mark A. DePristo
Jue Ruan
Tobias Marschall
Fritz J. Sedlazeck
Justin M. Zook
Heng Li
Sergey Koren
Andrew Carroll
David R. Rank
Michael W. Hunkapiller
Nature Biotechnology (2019)

Abstract

The DNA sequencing technologies in use today produce either highly accurate short reads or less-accurate long reads. We report the optimization of circular consensus sequencing (CCS) to improve the accuracy of single-molecule real-time (SMRT) sequencing (PacBio) and generate highly accurate (99.8%) long high-fidelity (HiFi) reads with an average length of 13.5 kilobases (kb). We applied our approach to sequence the well-characterized human HG002/NA24385 genome and obtained precision and recall rates of at least 99.91% for single-nucleotide variants (SNVs), 95.98% for insertions and deletions <50 bp (indels) and 95.99% for structural variants. Our CCS method matches or exceeds the ability of short-read sequencing to detect small variants and structural variants. We estimate that 2,434 discordances are correctable mistakes in the ‘genome in a bottle’ (GIAB) benchmark set. Nearly all (99.64%) variants can be phased into haplotypes, further improving variant detection. De novo genome assembly using CCS reads alone produced a contiguous and accurate genome with a contig N50 of >15 megabases (Mb) and concordance of 99.997%, substantially outperforming assembly with less-accurate long reads.

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