Abstract
Background Short-read sequencing technologies have long been the work-horse of microbiome analysis. Continuing technological advances are making the application of long-read sequencing to metagenomic samples increasingly feasible.
Results We demonstrate that whole bacterial chromosomes can be obtained from a complex community, by application of MinION sequencing to a sample from an EBPR bio-reactor, producing 6Gb of sequence that assembles in to multiple closed bacterial chromosomes. We provide a simple pipeline for processing such data, which includes a new approach to correcting erroneous frame-shifts.
Conclusions Advances in long read sequencing technology and corresponding algorithms will allow the routine extraction of whole chromosomes from environmental samples, providing a more detailed picture of individual members of a microbiome.