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Towards Personalized Medicine: An Improved De Novo Assembly Procedure for Early Detection of Drug Resistant HIV Minor Quasispecies in Patient Samples.

The third-generation sequencing technology, PacBio, has shown an ability to sequence the HIV virus amplicons in their full length. The long read of PaBio offers a distinct advantage to comprehensively understand the virus evolution complexity at quasispecies level (i.e. maintaining linkage information of variants) comparing to the short reads from Illumina shotgun sequencing. However, due to the highnoise nature of the PacBio reads, it is still a challenge to build accurate contigs at high sensitivity. Most of previously developed NGS assembly tools work with the assumption that the input reads are fairly accurate, which is largely true for the data derived from Sanger or Illumina technologies. When applying these tools on PacBio high-noise reads, they are largely driven by noise rather than true signal eventually leading to poor results in most cases. In this study, we propose the de novo assembly procedure, which comprises a positivefocused strategy, and linkage-frequency noise reduction so that it is more suitable for PacBio high-noise reads. We further tested the unique de novo assembly procedure on HIV PacBio benchmark data and clinical samples, which accurately assembled dominant and minor populations of HIV quasispecies as expected. The improved de novo assembly procedure shows potential ability to promote PacBio technology in the field of HIV drug-resistance clinical detection, as well as in broad HIV phylogenetic studies.

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