Strong sequencing bias in Nanopore and PacBio prevents assembly of Drosophila melanogaster Y-linked genes

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Abstract

Nanopore and PacBio are generally considered free from sequence composition bias, a key factor – alongside read length – that explains their success in producing high quality genome assemblies. However, our study reveals a systematic failure of both technologies to sequence and assemble specific exons of Drosophila melanogaster genes, indicating an overlooked limitation. Namely, multiple Y-linked exons are nearly or completely absent from raw reads produced by deep sequencing with state-of-the-art Nanopore (10.4 flow cells, 200× coverage) and PacBio (HiFi 50×). The same exons are accurately assembled using Illumina 65× coverage. We found that these missing exons are consistently located near simple satellite sequences, where sequencing fails at multiple levels: read initiation (very few reads start within satellite regions), read elongation (satellite-containing reads are shorter on average), and base-calling (quality scores drop as sequencing enters a satellite sequence). These findings challenge the assumption that long-read technologies is unbiased and reveal a critical barrier to assembling sequences near repetitive regions. As large-scale sequencing projects move towards telomere-to-telomere assemblies in a wide range of organisms, recognizing and addressing these biases will be important to achieving truly complete and accurate genomes. Additionally, the underrepresented Y-linked exons provides a valuable benchmark for refining those sequencing technologies while improving the assembly of the highly heterochromatic and often neglected Drosophila Y chromosome.

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