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  • Should I assemble samples from different locations together

    Dear all,

    Here I have a question about assembling shotgun metagenomics short reads (Illumina, paired-end reads, 2 x 150 bp).

    I have two drinking water pipelines in two cities. For each pipeline, I selected four different sites for sampling. At each site, I sampled water in the summer, fall, winter, and spring in 2017. I then processed the samples individually with the NGS and generated the short reads. I conducted the assembly with MEGAHIT for all my sample all at once:
    $ megahit -1 $R1s -2 $R2s

    I found that the final result has only one final.contigs.fa file instead of N contigs.fa files for N pairs of samples. It seems that MEGAHIT treats all my samples as a single group and assembles them together. Will this cause miss-assembly? For instance, read A from one sample and read B from another sample are merged to a contig because A and B are similar in sequence; however, read A and read B are actually from different bacterial species. Should this be a concern for my case? In other words, what would be the best strategy for assembling the reads from the two drinking water pipelines? Should I simply put all my samples together and assemble them all at once? Or, should I assemble the samples from the two water pipelines separately?

    Thanks a lot for any suggestions and comments.

  • #2
    I now learned that, when you have multiple environmental samples and do the assembly all together, the process is called co-assembly. Co-assembly has it own advantages and disadvantages.

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