Main menu

Full chromosome assembly of symbiotic fungal genomes from complex metagenomics samples using nanopore sequencing


Growing fungi in axenic culture is challenging, slow, or impossible for many species. Furthermore, fungi frequently occur embedded in diverse microorganismal communities. Shotgun sequencing samples from nature yields rich and complex metagenomes, and assembling target fungal genome from such samples can be challenging.

Here Jessica L. Allen used nanopore sequencing to assemble genomes of five species of lichenized fungi from five different families. Whole lichen extracts were sequenced and genomes assembled from complex, metagenomic data. All genomes were high quality, and one genome (Lepraria neglecta) was assembled to whole chromosomes. Nanopore sequencing is a promising approach for generating high-quality references genomes in non-model and hard to culture fungi.

Authors: Jessica L. Allen

Getting started

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

Nanopore technology

Subscribe to Nanopore updates Resources and publications What is the Nanopore Community

About Oxford Nanopore

News Company timeline Sustainability Leadership team Media resources & contacts For investors For partners Working at Oxford Nanopore Current vacancies Commercial information BSI 27001 accreditationBSI 90001 accreditationBSI mark of trust
Spanish flag