Repeat-rich regions cause false-positive detection of NUMTs: a case study in amphibians using an improved cane toad reference genome

Kelton Cheung, Lee Ann Rollins, Jillian M. Hammond, Kirston Barton, James M. Ferguson, Harrison J. F. Eyck, Richard Shine, Richard J. Edwards*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has been widely used in genetics research for decades. Contamination from nuclear DNA of mitochondrial origin (NUMTs) can confound studies of phylogenetic relationships and mtDNA heteroplasmy. Homology searches with mtDNA are widely used to detect NUMTs in the nuclear genome. Nevertheless, false-positive detection of NUMTs is common when handling repeat-rich sequences, while fragmented genomes might result in missing true NUMTs. In this study, we investigated different NUMT detection methods and how the quality of the genome assembly affects them. We presented an improved nuclear genome assembly (aRhiMar1.3) of the invasive cane toad (Rhinella marina) with additional long-read Nanopore and 10× linked-read sequencing. The final assembly was 3.47 Gb in length with 91.3% of tetrapod universal single-copy orthologs (n = 5,310), indicating the gene-containing regions were well assembled. We used 3 complementary methods (NUMTFinder, dinumt, and PALMER) to study the NUMT landscape of the cane toad genome. All 3 methods yielded consistent results, showing very few NUMTs in the cane toad genome. Furthermore, we expanded NUMT detection analyses to other amphibians and confirmed a weak relationship between genome size and the number of NUMTs present in the nuclear genome. Amphibians are repeat-rich, and we show that the number of NUMTs found in highly repetitive genomes is prone to inflation when using homology-based detection without filters. Together, this study provides an exemplar of how to robustly identify NUMTs in complex genomes when confounding effects on mtDNA analyses are a concern.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberevae246
Pages (from-to)1-14
Number of pages14
JournalGenome Biology and Evolution
Volume16
Issue number11
Early online date16 Nov 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Bibliographical note

Copyright the Author(s) 2024. Version archived for private and non-commercial use with the permission of the author/s and according to publisher conditions. For further rights please contact the publisher.

Keywords

  • amphibians
  • cane toad
  • genome assembly
  • mitochondrial DNA
  • NUMT
  • Rhinella marina

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