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Comparing De Novo Genome Assembly: The Long and Short of It

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, April 2011
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Title
Comparing De Novo Genome Assembly: The Long and Short of It
Published in
PLOS ONE, April 2011
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0019175
Pubmed ID
Authors

Giuseppe Narzisi, Bud Mishra

Abstract

Recent advances in DNA sequencing technology and their focal role in Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS) have rekindled a growing interest in the whole-genome sequence assembly (WGSA) problem, thereby, inundating the field with a plethora of new formalizations, algorithms, heuristics and implementations. And yet, scant attention has been paid to comparative assessments of these assemblers' quality and accuracy. No commonly accepted and standardized method for comparison exists yet. Even worse, widely used metrics to compare the assembled sequences emphasize only size, poorly capturing the contig quality and accuracy. This paper addresses these concerns: it highlights common anomalies in assembly accuracy through a rigorous study of several assemblers, compared under both standard metrics (N50, coverage, contig sizes, etc.) as well as a more comprehensive metric (Feature-Response Curves, FRC) that is introduced here; FRC transparently captures the trade-offs between contigs' quality against their sizes. For this purpose, most of the publicly available major sequence assemblers--both for low-coverage long (Sanger) and high-coverage short (Illumina) reads technologies--are compared. These assemblers are applied to microbial (Escherichia coli, Brucella, Wolbachia, Staphylococcus, Helicobacter) and partial human genome sequences (Chr. Y), using sequence reads of various read-lengths, coverages, accuracies, and with and without mate-pairs. It is hoped that, based on these evaluations, computational biologists will identify innovative sequence assembly paradigms, bioinformaticists will determine promising approaches for developing "next-generation" assemblers, and biotechnologists will formulate more meaningful design desiderata for sequencing technology platforms. A new software tool for computing the FRC metric has been developed and is available through the AMOS open-source consortium.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 27 4%
United Kingdom 12 2%
Germany 9 1%
Brazil 7 1%
Japan 6 <1%
Netherlands 5 <1%
Sweden 4 <1%
Australia 4 <1%
France 4 <1%
Other 26 4%
Unknown 503 83%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 158 26%
Student > Ph. D. Student 154 25%
Student > Master 79 13%
Student > Bachelor 43 7%
Other 27 4%
Other 100 16%
Unknown 46 8%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 360 59%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 80 13%
Computer Science 49 8%
Engineering 12 2%
Medicine and Dentistry 11 2%
Other 39 6%
Unknown 56 9%