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Oxford Nanopore Sequencing: New opportunities for plant genomics?


DNA sequencing was dominated by Sanger’s chain-termination method until the mid-2000s, when it was progressively supplanted by new sequencing technologies that can generate much larger quantities of data in a shorter time. At the forefront of these developments, long-read sequencing technologies (third-generation sequencing) can produce reads that are several kilobases in length. This greatly improves the accuracy of genome assemblies by spanning the highly-repetitive segments that cause difficulty for second-generation short-read technologies.

Third-generation sequencing is especially appealing for plant genomes, which can be extremely large with long stretches of highly-repetitive DNA. Until recently, the low basecalling accuracy of third-generation technologies meant that accurate genome assembly required expensive, high-coverage sequencing followed by computational analysis to correct for errors. However, today’s long-read technologies are more accurate and less expensive, making them the method of choice for the assembly of complex genomes.

Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT), a third-generation platform for the sequencing of native DNA strands, is particularly suitable for the generation of high-quality assemblies of highly-repetitive plant genomes.

Here we discuss the benefits of ONT, especially for the plant science community, and describe the issues that remain to be addressed when using ONT for plant genome sequencing.

Authors: Kathryn Dumschott, Maximilian H -W Schmidt, Harmeet Singh Chawla, Rod Snowdon, Björn Usadel

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