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<p align="center"><img src="misc/logo.png" alt="Unicycler" width="600"></p>

Unicycler is an assembly pipeline for bacterial genomes. It can assemble Illumina-only read sets where it functions as a SPAdes-optimiser. It can also assembly long-read-only sets (PacBio or Nanopore) where it runs a miniasm+Racon pipeline. For the best possible assemblies, give it both Illumina reads and long reads, and it will conduct a short-read-first hybrid assembly.

Read more about Unicycler here:

Wick RR, Judd LM, Gorrie CL, Holt KE. Unicycler: resolving bacterial genome assemblies from short and long sequencing reads. PLoS Comput Biol 2017.

And read about how we use it to complete bacterial genomes here:

Wick RR, Judd LM, Gorrie CL, Holt KE. Completing bacterial genome assemblies with multiplex MinION sequencing. Microb Genom 2017.

Table of contents

2022 update

Unicycler was initially made in 2016, back when long reads could be sparse and very noisy. For example, our early Oxford Nanopore sequencing runs might generate only 15× read depth for a single bacterial isolate, and most of the reads had a lot of errors. So Unicycler was designed to use low-depth and low-accuracy long reads to scaffold a short-read assembly graph to completion, an approach I call short-read-first hybrid assembly. Assuming the short-read assembly graph is in good shape, Unicycler does this quite well!

However, things have changed in the last six years. Nanopore sequencing yield is now much higher, making >100× depth easy to obtain, even on multiplexed runs. Read accuracy has also improved and continues to get better each year. High-depth and high-accuracy long reads make long-read-first hybrid assembly (long-read assembly followed by short-read polishing) a viable approach that's often preferable to Unicycler. I have developed Trycycler and Polypolish in the pursuit of ideal long-read-first assemblies.

Unicycler is not completely out-of-date, as it is still (in my opinion) the best tool for short-read-first hybrid assembly of bacterial genomes. But I think it should only be used for hybrid assembly when long-read-first is not an option – i.e. when long-read depth is low. I also think that Unicycler is good for short-read-only bacterial genomes, as it produces cleaner assembly graphs than SPAdes alone. So while Unicycler doesn't get a lot of my time and attention these days, I don't yet consider it to be abandonware.

For some up-to-date bacterial genome assembly tips, check out these parts of Trycycler's wiki:

Introduction

As input, Unicycler takes one of the following:

Reasons to use Unicycler:

Reasons to not use Unicycler:

Requirements

Unicycler expects external tools to be available in $PATH. If they aren't, you can specify their location using Unicycler options (e.g. --spades_path).

Bandage isn't required to run Unicycler, but it is very helpful for manually investigating assemblies (the graph images in this README were made with Bandage).

Installation

Install from source

These instructions install the most up-to-date version of Unicycler:

git clone https://github.com/rrwick/Unicycler.git
cd Unicycler
python3 setup.py install

Notes:

Build and run without installation

This approach compiles Unicycler code, but doesn't copy executables anywhere:

git clone https://github.com/rrwick/Unicycler.git
cd Unicycler
make

Now instead of running unicycler, you instead use path/to/unicycler-runner.py.

Quick usage

Illumina-only assembly:<br> unicycler -1 short_reads_1.fastq.gz -2 short_reads_2.fastq.gz -o output_dir

Long-read-only assembly:<br> unicycler -l long_reads.fastq.gz -o output_dir

Hybrid assembly:<br> unicycler -1 short_reads_1.fastq.gz -2 short_reads_2.fastq.gz -l long_reads.fastq.gz -o output_dir

If you don't have any reads of your own, take a look in the sample_data directory for links to some small read sets.

Background

Assembly graphs

To understand what Unicycler is doing, you need to know about assembly graphs. For a thorough introduction, I'd suggest this tutorial or the Velvet paper. But in short, an assembly graph is a data structure where contigs aren't disconnected sequences but can have connections to each other:

Just contigs:               Assembly graph:

TCGAAACTTGACGCGAGTCGC                             CTTGTTTA
TGCTACTGCTTGATGATGCGG                            /        \
TGTCCATT                    TCGAAACTTGACGCGAGTCGC          TGCTACTGCTTGATGATGCGG
CTTGTTTA                                         \        /
                                                  TGTCCATT

Most assemblers use graphs internally to produce their assemblies, but users often ignore the graph in favour of the conceptually simpler FASTA file of contigs. When a genome assembly is 100% complete, we have one contig per chromosome/plasmid and there's no real need for the graph. But most short-read assemblies are not complete, and a graph can describe an incomplete assembly much better than contigs alone.

Limitations of short reads

The main reason we can't get a complete assembly from short reads is that DNA usually contains repeats – the same sequence occurring two or more times in the genome. When a repeat is longer than the reads (or for paired-end sequencing, longer than the insert size), it forms a single contig in the assembly graph with multiple connections in and multiple connections out.

Here is what happens to a simple bacterial assembly graph as you add repeats to the genome:

<p align="center"><img src="misc/repeats_in_graph.png" alt="Repeats in graph"></p>

As repeats are added, the graph becomes increasingly tangled (and real assembly graphs get a lot more tangled than that).

To complete a bacterial genome assembly (i.e. find the one correct sequence for each chromosome/plasmid), we need to resolve the repeats. This means finding which way into a repeat matches up with which way out. Short reads don't have enough information for this but long reads do.

SPAdes graphs

Assembly graphs come in many different varieties, but we are particularly interested in the kind produced by SPAdes, because that is what Unicycler uses.

SPAdes graphs are made by performing a de Bruijn graph assembly with a range of different k-mer sizes, from small to large (see the SPAdes paper). Each assembly builds on the previous one, which allows SPAdes to get the advantages of both small k-mer assemblies (a more connected graph) and large k-mer assemblies (better ability to resolve repeats). Two contigs in a SPAdes graph that connect will overlap by their k-mer size (more info on the Bandage wiki page).

After producing the graph, SPAdes can perform further repeat resolution by using paired-end information. Since two reads in a pair are close to each other in the original DNA, SPAdes can use this to trace paths in the graph to form larger contigs (see their paper on ExSPAnder). However, the SPAdes contigs with repeat resolution do not come in graph form – they are only available in a FASTA file.

Method: Illumina-only assembly

When assembling just Illumina reads, Unicycler functions mainly as a SPAdes optimiser. It offers a few benefits over using SPAdes alone:

More information on the Illumina-only assembly process is described in the steps below.

SPAdes assembly

<img align="right" src="misc/k-mer_plot.png" width="156" height="179">

Unicycler uses SPAdes to assemble the Illumina reads into an assembly graph. It tries assemblies at a wide range of k-mer sizes, evaluating the graph at each one. It chooses the graph which best minimises both contig count and dead end count. If the Illumina reads are good, it produces an assembly graph with long contigs but few to no dead ends (more info here). Since a typical bacterial genome has no dead ends (the sequences are circular) an ideal assembly graph won't either.

A raw SPAdes graph can also contain some 'junk' sequences due to sequencer artefacts or contamination, so Unicycler performs some graph cleaning to remove these. Therefore, small amounts of contamination in the Illumina reads should not be a problem.

Multiplicity

To scaffold the graph, Unicycler must distinguish between single copy contigs and repeats. It does this with a greedy algorithm that uses both read depth and graph connectivity:

<p align="center"><img src="misc/multiplicity.png" alt="Multiplicity assignment" width="700"></p>

This process does not assume that all single copy contigs have the same read depth, which allows it to identify single copy contigs from plasmids as well as the chromosome. After it has determined multiplicity, Unicycler chooses a set of 'anchor' contigs. These are sufficiently-long single-copy contigs suitable for bridging in later steps.

Overlap removal

To reduce redundancy and allow for neatly circularised contigs, Unicycler removes all overlap in the graphs:

<pre> Before: After: <b>GACGCGT</b>TGACAAGGAAAT TGACAAGGAAAT / / TTGACTACCCA<b>GACGCGT</b> TTGACTACCCAGACGCGT \ \ <b>GACGCGT</b>CCTCTCATTCTA CCTCTCATTCTA </pre>

Bridging

At this point, the assembly graph does not contain the SPAdes repeat resolution. To apply this to the graph, Unicycler builds bridges between single copy contigs using the path information in the SPAdes assembly.

<p align="center"><img src="misc/short_read_bridging.png" alt="Short read bridging" width="600"></p>

Bridges are given a quality score, most importantly based on the length of the bridge compared to the length of the paired end insert size, so bridges which span a long repeat are given a low score. Since paired-end sequencing cannot resolve repeats longer than the insert size, bridges which attempt to span long repeats cannot be trusted. This selectivity helps to reduce the number of misassemblies.

Method: long-read-only assembly

When assembling just long reads, Unicycler uses a miniasm+Racon pipeline. It offers a couple advantages over using other long-read-only assemblers:

More information on the long-read-only assembly process is described in the steps below.

miniasm assembly

Unicycler uses minimap and miniasm to assemble the long reads in essentially the same manner as described in the miniasm README. This produces an uncorrected assembly which is made directly of pieces of reads – the assembly error rate will be similar to the read error rate.

The version of miniasm that comes with Unicycler is slightly modified in a couple of ways. The first modification is to help circular replicons assemble into circular string graphs. The other modification only applies to hybrid assembly, so I'll come back to that!

Racon polishing

After miniasm assembly, Unicycler carries out multiple rounds of polishing with Racon to improve the sequence accuracy. It will polish until the assembly stops improving, as measured by the agreement between the reads and the assembly. Circular replicons are 'rotated' (have their starting position shifted) between rounds of polishing to ensure that no part of the sequence is left unpolished.

Method: hybrid assembly

Hybrid assembly (using both Illumina read and long reads) is where Unicycler really shines. Like with the Illumina-only pipeline described above, Unicycler will produce an Illumina assembly graph. It then uses long reads to build bridges, which often allows it to resolve all repeats in the genome, resulting in a complete genome assembly.

In hybrid assembly, Unicycler carries out all the steps in the Illumina-only pipeline, plus the additional steps below:

Long-read plus contig assembly

This step uses miniasm and Racon, and is very much like the long-read-only assembly method described above. Here however, the assembly is not just on long reads but a mixture of long reads and anchor contigs from the Illumina-only assembly. Since these anchor contigs can often be much longer than long reads (sometimes hundreds of kbp), they can significantly help the assembly. This takes advantage of the other modification to miniasm which was teased above. In Unicycler's miniasm, contigs and long reads are treated slightly differently in the string graph manipulations to better perform this step.

After the assembly is finished, Unicycler finds anchor contigs in the assembled sequence and uses the intervening sequences to create bridges:

assembled sequence:                 TATGGTCTCGCATGTTAATTCTACTCCCGAACTTGGCCCATCCCCGGCTAGGCTGGGCACTAGACGGTGGAT
anchor contigs:                         GTCTCGCATGTTAA    ACTCCCGAACTTGGCCCATCCCCGGC       GGCACTAGACGGTGG
intervening sequences for bridges:                    TTCT                          TAGGCTG

Direct long-read bridging

Unicycler also attempts to make long-read bridges directly by semi-globally aligning the long reads to the assembly graph. For each pair of single copy contigs which are linked by read alignments, Unicycler uses the read consensus sequence to find a connecting path and creates a bridge.

<p align="center"><img src="misc/long_read_bridging.png" alt="Long-read bridging"></p>

This step and the previous step are somewhat redundant, as both use long reads to build bridges between short-read contigs. They are both included because they have different strengths. The previous approach can tolerate low long-read depth but requires a good short-read assembly graph (i.e. few dead ends). This step requires decent long-read depth but can tolerate poor short-read assembly graphs. By using the two strategies together, Unicycler can successfully handle many types of input.

Bridge application

At this point of the pipeline there can be many bridges, some of which may conflict. Unicycler therefore assigns a quality score to each based on all available evidence (e.g. read alignment quality, graph path match, read depth consistency). Bridges are then applied in order of decreasing quality so whenever there is a conflict, the most supported bridge is used. A minimum quality threshold prevents the application of low evidence bridges (see Conservative, normal and bold for more information).

<p align="center"><img src="misc/bridge_application.png" alt="Application of bridges"></p>

Finalisation

If the above steps have resulted in any simple, circular sequences, then Unicycler will attempt to rotate/flip them to begin at a consistent starting gene. By default this is dnaA or repA, but users can specify their own with the --start_genes option.

Conservative, normal and bold

Unicycler can be run in three modes: conservative, normal (the default) and bold, set with the --mode option. Conservative mode is least likely to produce a complete assembly but has a very low risk of misassembly. Bold mode is most likely to produce a complete assembly but carries greater risk of misassembly. Normal mode is intermediate regarding both completeness and misassembly risk.

If the structural accuracy of your assembly is paramount to your research, conservative mode is recommended. If you want a completed genome, even if it contains a mistake or two, then use bold mode.

The specific differences between the three modes are as follows:

ModeInvocationShort read bridgesBridge quality thresholdContig merging
conservative‑‑mode conservativenot usedhigh (25)contigs are only merged with bridges
normal‑‑mode normal (or nothing)usedmedium (10)contigs are merged with bridges and when their multiplicity is 1
bold‑‑mode boldusedlow (1)contigs are merged wherever possible
<p align="center"><img src="misc/conservative_normal_bold.png" alt="Conservative, normal and bold" width="550"></p>

In the above example, the conservative assembly is incomplete because some bridges fell below the quality threshold and were not applied. Its contigs, however, are very reliable. Normal mode nearly gave a complete assembly, but a couple of unmerged contigs remain. Bold mode completed the assembly, but since lower confidence regions were bridged and merged, there is a larger risk of error.

Options and usage

Standard options

Run unicycler --help to view the program's most commonly used options:

usage: unicycler [-h] [--help_all] [--version] [-1 SHORT1] [-2 SHORT2] [-s UNPAIRED] [-l LONG] -o OUT
                 [--verbosity VERBOSITY] [--min_fasta_length MIN_FASTA_LENGTH] [--keep KEEP]
                 [-t THREADS] [--mode {conservative,normal,bold}] [--linear_seqs LINEAR_SEQS]

       __
       \ \___
        \ ___\
        //
   ____//      _    _         _                     _
 //_  //\\    | |  | |       |_|                   | |
//  \//  \\   | |  | | _ __   _   ___  _   _   ___ | |  ___  _ __
||  (O)  ||   | |  | || '_ \ | | / __|| | | | / __|| | / _ \| '__|
\\    \_ //   | |__| || | | || || (__ | |_| || (__ | ||  __/| |
 \\_____//     \____/ |_| |_||_| \___| \__, | \___||_| \___||_|
                                        __/ |
                                       |___/

Unicycler: an assembly pipeline for bacterial genomes

Help:
  -h, --help                      Show this help message and exit
  --help_all                      Show a help message with all program options
  --version                       Show Unicycler's version number

Input:
  -1 SHORT1, --short1 SHORT1      FASTQ file of first short reads in each pair
  -2 SHORT2, --short2 SHORT2      FASTQ file of second short reads in each pair
  -s UNPAIRED, --unpaired UNPAIRED
                                  FASTQ file of unpaired short reads
  -l LONG, --long LONG            FASTQ or FASTA file of long reads

Output:
  -o OUT, --out OUT               Output directory (required)
  --verbosity VERBOSITY           Level of stdout and log file information (default: 1)
                                    0 = no stdout, 1 = basic progress indicators, 2 = extra info,
                                    3 = debugging info
  --min_fasta_length MIN_FASTA_LENGTH
                                  Exclude contigs from the FASTA file which are shorter than this
                                  length (default: 100)
  --keep KEEP                     Level of file retention (default: 1)
                                    0 = only keep final files: assembly (FASTA, GFA and log),
                                    1 = also save graphs at main checkpoints,
                                    2 = also keep SAM (enables fast rerun in different mode),
                                    3 = keep all temp files and save all graphs (for debugging)

Other:
  -t THREADS, --threads THREADS   Number of threads used (default: 8)
  --mode {conservative,normal,bold}
                                  Bridging mode (default: normal)
                                    conservative = smaller contigs, lowest misassembly rate
                                    normal = moderate contig size and misassembly rate
                                    bold = longest contigs, higher misassembly rate
  --linear_seqs LINEAR_SEQS       The expected number of linear (i.e. non-circular) sequences in the
                                  underlying sequence (default: 0)

Advanced options

Run unicycler --help_all to see a complete list of the program's options. These allow you to turn off parts of the pipeline, specify the location of tools (only necessary if they are not in PATH) and adjust various settings:

usage: unicycler [-h] [--help_all] [--version] [-1 SHORT1] [-2 SHORT2] [-s UNPAIRED] [-l LONG] -o OUT
                 [--verbosity VERBOSITY] [--min_fasta_length MIN_FASTA_LENGTH] [--keep KEEP]
                 [-t THREADS] [--mode {conservative,normal,bold}] [--min_bridge_qual MIN_BRIDGE_QUAL]
                 [--linear_seqs LINEAR_SEQS] [--min_anchor_seg_len MIN_ANCHOR_SEG_LEN]
                 [--spades_path SPADES_PATH] [--min_kmer_frac MIN_KMER_FRAC]
                 [--max_kmer_frac MAX_KMER_FRAC] [--kmers KMERS] [--kmer_count KMER_COUNT]
                 [--depth_filter DEPTH_FILTER] [--largest_component] [--spades_options SPADES_OPTIONS]
                 [--no_miniasm] [--racon_path RACON_PATH]
                 [--existing_long_read_assembly EXISTING_LONG_READ_ASSEMBLY] [--no_simple_bridges]
                 [--no_long_read_alignment] [--contamination CONTAMINATION] [--scores SCORES]
                 [--low_score LOW_SCORE] [--min_component_size MIN_COMPONENT_SIZE]
                 [--min_dead_end_size MIN_DEAD_END_SIZE] [--no_rotate] [--start_genes START_GENES]
                 [--start_gene_id START_GENE_ID] [--start_gene_cov START_GENE_COV]
                 [--makeblastdb_path MAKEBLASTDB_PATH] [--tblastn_path TBLASTN_PATH]

       __
       \ \___
        \ ___\
        //
   ____//      _    _         _                     _
 //_  //\\    | |  | |       |_|                   | |
//  \//  \\   | |  | | _ __   _   ___  _   _   ___ | |  ___  _ __
||  (O)  ||   | |  | || '_ \ | | / __|| | | | / __|| | / _ \| '__|
\\    \_ //   | |__| || | | || || (__ | |_| || (__ | ||  __/| |
 \\_____//     \____/ |_| |_||_| \___| \__, | \___||_| \___||_|
                                        __/ |
                                       |___/

Unicycler: an assembly pipeline for bacterial genomes

Help:
  -h, --help                      Show this help message and exit
  --help_all                      Show a help message with all program options
  --version                       Show Unicycler's version number

Input:
  -1 SHORT1, --short1 SHORT1      FASTQ file of first short reads in each pair
  -2 SHORT2, --short2 SHORT2      FASTQ file of second short reads in each pair
  -s UNPAIRED, --unpaired UNPAIRED
                                  FASTQ file of unpaired short reads
  -l LONG, --long LONG            FASTQ or FASTA file of long reads

Output:
  -o OUT, --out OUT               Output directory (required)
  --verbosity VERBOSITY           Level of stdout and log file information (default: 1)
                                    0 = no stdout, 1 = basic progress indicators, 2 = extra info,
                                    3 = debugging info
  --min_fasta_length MIN_FASTA_LENGTH
                                  Exclude contigs from the FASTA file which are shorter than this
                                  length (default: 100)
  --keep KEEP                     Level of file retention (default: 1)
                                    0 = only keep final files: assembly (FASTA, GFA and log),
                                    1 = also save graphs at main checkpoints,
                                    2 = also keep SAM (enables fast rerun in different mode),
                                    3 = keep all temp files and save all graphs (for debugging)

Other:
  -t THREADS, --threads THREADS   Number of threads used (default: 8)
  --mode {conservative,normal,bold}
                                  Bridging mode (default: normal)
                                    conservative = smaller contigs, lowest misassembly rate
                                    normal = moderate contig size and misassembly rate
                                    bold = longest contigs, higher misassembly rate
  --min_bridge_qual MIN_BRIDGE_QUAL
                                  Do not apply bridges with a quality below this value
                                    conservative mode default: 25.0
                                    normal mode default: 10.0
                                    bold mode default: 1.0
  --linear_seqs LINEAR_SEQS       The expected number of linear (i.e. non-circular) sequences in the
                                  underlying sequence (default: 0)
  --min_anchor_seg_len MIN_ANCHOR_SEG_LEN
                                  If set, Unicycler will not use segments shorter than this as
                                  scaffolding anchors (default: automatic threshold)

SPAdes assembly:
  These options control the short-read SPAdes assembly at the beginning of the Unicycler pipeline.

  --spades_path SPADES_PATH       Path to the SPAdes executable (default: spades.py)
  --min_kmer_frac MIN_KMER_FRAC   Lowest k-mer size for SPAdes assembly, expressed as a fraction of
                                  the read length (default: 0.2)
  --max_kmer_frac MAX_KMER_FRAC   Highest k-mer size for SPAdes assembly, expressed as a fraction of
                                  the read length (default: 0.95)
  --kmers KMERS                   Exact k-mers to use for SPAdes assembly, comma-separated (example:
                                  21,51,71, default: automatic)
  --kmer_count KMER_COUNT         Number of k-mer steps to use in SPAdes assembly (default: 8)
  --depth_filter DEPTH_FILTER     Filter out contigs lower than this fraction of the chromosomal
                                  depth, if doing so does not result in graph dead ends (default:
                                  0.25)
  --largest_component             Only keep the largest connected component of the assembly graph
                                  (default: keep all connected components)
  --spades_options SPADES_OPTIONS
                                  Additional options to be given to SPAdes (example: "--phred-offset
                                  33", default: no additional options)

miniasm+Racon assembly:
  These options control the use of miniasm and Racon to produce long-read bridges.

  --no_miniasm                    Skip miniasm+Racon bridging (default: use miniasm and Racon to
                                  produce long-read bridges)
  --racon_path RACON_PATH         Path to the Racon executable (default: racon)
  --existing_long_read_assembly EXISTING_LONG_READ_ASSEMBLY
                                  A pre-prepared long-read assembly for the sample in GFA or FASTA
                                  format. If this option is used, Unicycler will skip the
                                  miniasm/Racon steps and instead use the given assembly (default:
                                  perform long-read assembly using miniasm/Racon)

Long-read alignment and bridging:
  These options control the use of long-read alignment to produce long-read bridges.

  --no_simple_bridges             Skip simple long-read bridging (default: use simple long-read
                                  bridging)
  --no_long_read_alignment        Skip long-read-alignment-based bridging (default: use long-read
                                  alignments to produce bridges)
  --contamination CONTAMINATION   FASTA file of known contamination in long reads
  --scores SCORES                 Comma-delimited string of alignment scores: match, mismatch, gap
                                  open, gap extend (default: 3,-6,-5,-2)
  --low_score LOW_SCORE           Score threshold - alignments below this are considered poor
                                  (default: set threshold automatically)

Graph cleaning:
  These options control the removal of small leftover sequences after bridging is complete.

  --min_component_size MIN_COMPONENT_SIZE
                                  Graph components smaller than this size (bp) will be removed from
                                  the final graph (default: 1000)
  --min_dead_end_size MIN_DEAD_END_SIZE
                                  Graph dead ends smaller than this size (bp) will be removed from the
                                  final graph (default: 1000)

Assembly rotation:
  These options control the rotation of completed circular sequence near the end of the Unicycler
  pipeline.

  --no_rotate                     Do not rotate completed replicons to start at a standard gene
                                  (default: completed replicons are rotated)
  --start_genes START_GENES       FASTA file of genes for start point of rotated replicons (default:
                                  start_genes.fasta)
  --start_gene_id START_GENE_ID   The minimum required BLAST percent identity for a start gene search
                                  (default: 90.0)
  --start_gene_cov START_GENE_COV
                                  The minimum required BLAST percent coverage for a start gene search
                                  (default: 95.0)
  --makeblastdb_path MAKEBLASTDB_PATH
                                  Path to the makeblastdb executable (default: makeblastdb)
  --tblastn_path TBLASTN_PATH     Path to the tblastn executable (default: tblastn)

Output files

Unicycler's most important output files are assembly.gfa, assembly.fasta and unicycler.log. These are produced by every Unicycler run. Which other files are saved to its output directory depends on the value of --keep:

All files and directories are described in the table below. Intermediate output files (everything except for assembly.gfa, assembly.fasta and unicycler.log) will be prefixed with a number so they are in chronological order. Whether or not a file is in the output depends on the --keep level and type of input reads (e.g. short-read-only or hybrid).

File/directoryDescription--keep level
spades_assembly/directory containing SPAdes files log (can be useful for debugging if SPAdes crashes)3
*_spades_graph_k*.gfaunaltered SPAdes assembly graphs at each k-mer size1
*_depth_filter.gfabest SPAdes short-read assembly graph after low-depth contigs have been removed and multiplicity determination1
*_overlaps_removed.gfaoverlap-free version of the best SPAdes graph, with some more graph clean-up1
miniasm_assembly/directory containing miniasm string graphs and unitig graphs3
simple_bridging/directory containing files for the simple long-read bridging step3
*_long_read_assembly.gfathe long-read+contig miniasm+Racon assembly1
read_alignment/directory containing long_read_alignments.sam2
*_bridges_applied.gfabridges applied, before any cleaning or merging1
*_cleaned.gfaredundant contigs removed from the graph3
*_merged.gfacontigs merged together where possible3
*_final_clean.gfamore redundant contigs removed1
blast/directory containing files for the assembly-rotation BLAST search3
*_rotated.gfacircular replicons rotated and/or flipped to a start position1
assembly.gfafinal assembly in GFA v1 graph format0
assembly.fastafinal assembly in FASTA format (same sequences as in assembly.gfa expect for very short contigs)0
unicycler.logUnicycler log file (same info as was printed to stdout)0

Tips

Running time

Unicycler is thorough and accurate, but not particularly fast. For hybrid assemblies, the direct long-read bridging step of the pipeline can take a while to complete. Two main factors influence the running time: the number of long reads (more reads take longer to align) and the genome size/complexity (finding bridge paths is more difficult in complex graphs).

Unicycler may only take an hour or so to assemble a small, simple genome with low depth long reads. On the other hand, a complex genome with many long reads may take 12 hours to finish or more. If you have a very high depth of long reads (e.g. >100×), you can make Unicycler run faster by subsampling for only the best/longest reads (check out Filtlong).

Using a lot of threads (with the --threads option) can make Unicycler run faster too. It will only use up to 8 threads by default, but if you're running it on a big machine with lots of CPU and RAM, feel free to use more!

Unicycler also works with PyPy which can speed up parts of its pipeline. However, some of Unicycler's slowest steps are when it calls other tools (like SPAdes) or uses C++ code, so PyPy may not help much. I haven't tested this thoroughly – if you try it, let me know how you go!

Necessary read length

The length of a long read is very important, typically more than its accuracy, because longer reads are more likely to align to multiple single copy contigs, allowing Unicycler to build bridges.

Consider a sequence with a 2 kb repeat:

<p align="center"><img src="misc/read_length.png" alt="Long read length"></p>

In order to resolve the repeat, a read must span it by aligning to some sequence on either side. In this example, the 1 kb reads are shorter than the repeat and are useless. The 2.5 kb reads can resolve the repeat, but they have to be in just the right place to do so. Only one out of the six in this example is useful. The 5 kb reads, however, have a much easier time spanning the repeat and all three are useful.

So how long must your reads be for Unicycler to complete an assembly? Longer than the longest repeat in the genome. Depending on the genome, that might be a 1 kb insertion sequence, a 6 kb rRNA operon or a 50 kb prophage. If your reads are just a bit longer than the longest repeat, you'll probably need a lot of them. If they are much longer, then fewer reads should suffice. But in any scenario, longer is better!

Bad Illumina reads

Unicycler prefers decent Illumina reads as input – ideally with uniform read depth and 100% genome coverage. Bad Illumina read sets can still work in Unicycler, but greater long-read depth will be required to compensate.

You can look at Unicycler graphs in Bandage to get a quick impression of the Illumina read quality:

<p align="center"><img src="misc/illumina_graph_comparison.png" alt="Graphs of varying quality" width="750"></p>

A is an very good Illumina read graph – the contigs are long and there are no dead ends. This read set is ideally suited for use in Unicycler and shouldn't require too many long reads to complete (10–20× would probably be enough).

B is also a good graph. The genome is more complex, resulting in a more tangled structure, but there are still very few dead ends (you can see one in the lower left). This read set would also work well in Unicycler, though more long reads may be required to get a complete genome (maybe 30× or so).

C is a disaster! It is broken into many pieces, probably because parts of the genome got no read depth at all. This genome may take lots of long reads to complete in Unicycler, possibly 50× or more. The final assembly will probably have more small errors (SNPs and indels), as parts of the genome cannot be polished well with Illumina reads. If your graph looks like this, I'd recommend trying a long-read-first assembly approach (see 2022 update).

Very short contigs

Confused by very small (e.g. 2 bp) contigs in Unicycler assemblies? Unlike a SPAdes graph where neighbouring sequences overlap by their k-mer size, Unicycler's final graph has no overlaps and the sequences adjoin directly. This means that contigs in complex regions can be quite short. They may be useless as stand-alone contigs but are still important in the graph structure.

<p align="center"><img src="misc/short_contigs.png" alt="Short contigs in assembly graph"></p>

If short contigs are a problem for your downstream analysis, you can use the --min_fasta_length to exclude them from Unicycler's FASTA file (they will still be included in the GFA file).

Chromosomes and plasmid depth

Unicycler normalises the depth of contigs in the graph to the median value. This typically means that the chromosome has a depth near 1× and plasmids may have different (typically higher) depths.

<p align="center"><img src="misc/depth.png" alt="Plasmid depths"></p>

In the above graph, the chromosome is at the top (you can only see part of it) and there are two plasmids. The plasmid on the left occurs in approximately 4 or 5 copies per cell. For the larger plasmid on the right, most cells probably had one copy but some had more. Since sequencing biases can affect read depth, these per cell counts should be interpreted loosely.

Known contamination

If your long reads have known contamination, you can use the --contamination option to give Unicycler a FASTA file of the contaminant sequences. Unicycler will then discard any reads for which the best alignment is to the contaminant.

For example, if you've sequenced two isolates in succession on the same Nanopore flow cell, there may be residual reads from the first sample in the second run. In this case, you can supply a reference/assembly of the first sample to Unicycler when assembling the second sample.

Some Oxford Nanopore protocols include a lambda phage spike-in as a control. Since this is a common contaminant, you can simply use --contamination lambda to filter these out (no need to supply a FASTA file).

Manual multiplicity

If Unicycler makes a serious mistake during its multiplicity determination, this can have detrimental effects on the rest of the assembly. I've seen this happen when:

If you believe this has happened in your assembly, you can manually assign multiplicities and try the assembly again. Here's the process:

Manual completion

If Unicycler doesn't complete your bacterial genome assembly on its own, you may be able to complete it manually with a bit of bioinformatics detective work. There's no single, straight-forward procedure for doing so, but I've put together a few examples on the Unicycler wiki which may be helpful.

Using an external long-read assembly

If you have a long-read assembly that you've prepared outside Unicycler and trust (e.g. with Canu), you can give it to Unicycler with --existing_long_read_assembly. Unicycler will then skip its miniasm/Racon step and use this assembly instead.

Assemblies with contig overlaps

Unicycler removes overlaps between contigs, resulting in cleaner assembly graphs. However, in some contexts, you might want these overlaps. In particular, if you are analysing your assemblies with a k-mer-based algorithm, overlaps might be a good thing so k-mers at contig boundaries aren't lost.

If this applies to you, I'd recommend using Unicycler's 002_depth_filter.gfa file (the last of the intermediate files before overlaps are removed) instead of the final assembly.fasta file. If you need this in FASTA format, Torsten's any2fasta tool can do the conversion.

Acknowledgements

Unicycler would not have been possible without Kat Holt, my fellow researchers in her lab and the many other people I work with at the University of Melbourne's Bio21 Molecular Science & Biotechnology Institute. In particular, Margaret Lam, Kelly Wyres, David Edwards and Claire Gorrie worked with me on many challenging genomes during Unicycler's development. Louise Judd is great with the MinION and produced many of the long reads I have used when developing Unicycler.

Unicycler uses SeqAn to perform alignments and other sequence manipulations. The authors of this library have been very helpful during Unicycler's development and I owe them a great deal of thanks! It also uses minimap for alignment and miniasm for long-read assembly, and so I'd like to thank Heng Li for these tools. Finally, Unicycler uses nanoflann, a delightfully fast and lightweight nearest neighbour library, to perform its line-finding in semi-global alignment.

License

GNU General Public License, version 3