I have sequencing data of five bacteria, which were generated using Illumina MiSeq. Four of them were sequenced using a paired-end 2x300 protocol and one was sequenced using the nextera mate-pair protocol.
My question is: What are the softwares that you recommend me to assemble these genomes (the largest has almost 8 Mbp)?
I have access to a CLC Workbench. It seems quite ease to use, but I dont know if it is the best one. Most of papers that I found that evaluate the performance of assemblers from two-three years ago.
I also have to mention that I have two i7 with 8 threads PCs available for this objective (one with 32 and another with 8 Gb RAM).
Thanks in advance.
Not exactly what you're looking for, but this guide was very useful for me: Beginner’s guide to comparative bacterial genome analysis using next-generation sequence data.
I already read this paper. Very good. They recommended Velvet, but I believe that there are better options. Thank you anyway.
I like using CLC Workbench. Even if you don't use their assembler you can do the last steps in CLC, it's much more convenient. Try SPAdes, SOAPdenovo and you can compare it to CLC built-in assembler.