MitoHiFi: a python pipeline for mitochondrial genome assembly from PacBio high fidelity reads

Marcela Uliano‐Silva(Wellcome Sanger Institute), João Gabriel R. N. Ferreira(Fundação Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro), Ksenia Krasheninnikova(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Mark Blaxter(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Nova Mieszkowska, Neil Hall, Peter W. H. Holland, Richard Durbin(University of Cambridge), Thomas A. Richards, Paul Kersey, Peter M. Hollingsworth, Willie Wilson, Alex D. Twyford, Ester Gaya, Mara Lawniczak, Owen T. Lewis, Gavin R. Broad, Fergal J. Martin, Michelle Hart, Ian Barnes(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Giulio Formenti(Rockefeller University), Linelle Abueg(Rockefeller University), James Torrance(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Eugene W. Myers(Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University), Richard Durbin(University of Cambridge), Mark Blaxter(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Shane McCarthy(University of Cambridge)
BMC Bioinformatics
July 18, 2023
Cited by 1,767Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: PacBio high fidelity (HiFi) sequencing reads are both long (15-20 kb) and highly accurate (> Q20). Because of these properties, they have revolutionised genome assembly leading to more accurate and contiguous genomes. In eukaryotes the mitochondrial genome is sequenced alongside the nuclear genome often at very high coverage. A dedicated tool for mitochondrial genome assembly using HiFi reads is still missing. RESULTS: MitoHiFi was developed within the Darwin Tree of Life Project to assemble mitochondrial genomes from the HiFi reads generated for target species. The input for MitoHiFi is either the raw reads or the assembled contigs, and the tool outputs a mitochondrial genome sequence fasta file along with annotation of protein and RNA genes. Variants arising from heteroplasmy are assembled independently, and nuclear insertions of mitochondrial sequences are identified and not used in organellar genome assembly. MitoHiFi has been used to assemble 374 mitochondrial genomes (368 Metazoa and 6 Fungi species) for the Darwin Tree of Life Project, the Vertebrate Genomes Project and the Aquatic Symbiosis Genome Project. Inspection of 60 mitochondrial genomes assembled with MitoHiFi for species that already have reference sequences in public databases showed the widespread presence of previously unreported repeats. CONCLUSIONS: MitoHiFi is able to assemble mitochondrial genomes from a wide phylogenetic range of taxa from Pacbio HiFi data. MitoHiFi is written in python and is freely available on GitHub ( https://github.com/marcelauliano/MitoHiFi ). MitoHiFi is available with its dependencies as a Docker container on GitHub (ghcr.io/marcelauliano/mitohifi:master).


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