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Complete vertebrate mitogenomes reveal widespread repeats and gene duplications

Authors :
Jennifer Balacco
Sylke Winkler
Jason Skelton
Jacquelyn Mountcastle
Roberto Ambrosini
Giulio Formenti
Olivier Fedrigo
Karen Oliver
Iliana Bista
Marco Rosario Capodiferro
Simon Mayes
David S. Horner
Alessandro Achilli
Samara Brown
Emma Betteridge
Sergey Koren
Alan Tracey
Shane A. McCarthy
Jonas Korlach
Craig Corton
Edward L. Braun
Bettina Haase
Adam M. Phillippy
Marcela Uliano-Silva
Jonathan Wood
Erich D. Jarvis
Eugene W. Myers
Woori Kwak
Matteo Chiara
Vania Costa
Daniel Fordham
Arkarachai Fungtammasan
Farooq O. Al-Ajli
Peter Houde
Michelle Smith
Jale Dolucan
Kerstin Howe
James Torrance
Arang Rhie
Richard Durbin
Formenti, Giulio [0000-0002-7554-5991]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Genome Biology, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-22 (2021), Genome Biology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2021.

Abstract

Background Modern sequencing technologies should make the assembly of the relatively small mitochondrial genomes an easy undertaking. However, few tools exist that address mitochondrial assembly directly. Results As part of the Vertebrate Genomes Project (VGP) we develop mitoVGP, a fully automated pipeline for similarity-based identification of mitochondrial reads and de novo assembly of mitochondrial genomes that incorporates both long (> 10 kbp, PacBio or Nanopore) and short (100–300 bp, Illumina) reads. Our pipeline leads to successful complete mitogenome assemblies of 100 vertebrate species of the VGP. We observe that tissue type and library size selection have considerable impact on mitogenome sequencing and assembly. Comparing our assemblies to purportedly complete reference mitogenomes based on short-read sequencing, we identify errors, missing sequences, and incomplete genes in those references, particularly in repetitive regions. Our assemblies also identify novel gene region duplications. The presence of repeats and duplications in over half of the species herein assembled indicates that their occurrence is a principle of mitochondrial structure rather than an exception, shedding new light on mitochondrial genome evolution and organization. Conclusions Our results indicate that even in the “simple” case of vertebrate mitogenomes the completeness of many currently available reference sequences can be further improved, and caution should be exercised before claiming the complete assembly of a mitogenome, particularly from short reads alone.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-22 (2021), Genome Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....55e4b038394b383e7853f4c16aa6e0ec