Main menu

Enrichment analysis of k-mer composition enables identification of telomeres

  • Published on: July 30 2019
  • Source: ECCB 2019

Background: Telomeres and repeat-rich subtelomeric regions are often hard to assemble from high-throughput sequencing data, and therefore the exact nature of the telomeric sequences remains unknown in many species.
Results: We have developed a k-mer based sequence analysis method to identify contig ends belonging to telomeric and sub-telomeric regions. Our method uses a combination of long-read and short-read sequencing and compares k-mer composition in reads from untreated DNA to DNA treated with BAL31 nuclease. This enzyme digests ends of DNA molecules and thus creates a depletion of telomeric and sub-telomeric areas.
Conclusions: We have applied our methods to the genome of basidiomycetous yeast Jaminaea angkorensis genome. Our approach combining k-mer analysis, BAL31 digestion protocol, and Oxford Nanopore sequencing has improved assembly of repeat-rich subtelomeric regions in this genome.

Download the PDF

Getting started

Buy a MinION starter pack Nanopore store Sequencing service providers Channel partners

Quick links

Intellectual property Cookie policy Corporate reporting Privacy policy Terms, conditions and policies Accessibility

About Oxford Nanopore

Contact us News Media resources & contacts Investor centre Careers BSI 27001 accreditationBSI 90001 accreditationBSI mark of trust
Spanish flag