Split-Read Indel and Structural Variant Calling Using PINDEL

Author(s):  
Kai Ye ◽  
Li Guo ◽  
Xiaofei Yang ◽  
Eric-Wubbo Lamijer ◽  
Keiran Raine ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (18) ◽  
pp. i333-i339 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Rausch ◽  
T. Zichner ◽  
A. Schlattl ◽  
A. M. Stutz ◽  
V. Benes ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samantha Zarate ◽  
Andrew Carroll ◽  
Olga Krashenina ◽  
Fritz J Sedlazeck ◽  
Goo Jun ◽  
...  

AbstractHere we present Parliament2 – a structural variant caller which combines multiple best-in-class structural variant callers to create a highly accurate callset. This captures more events than the individual callers achieve independently. Parliament2 uses a call-overlap-genotype approach that is highly extensible to new methods and presents users the choice to run some or all of Breakdancer, Breakseq, CNVnator, Delly, Lumpy, and Manta to run. Parliament2 applies an additional parallelization framework to speed certain callers and executes these in parallel, taking advantage of the different resource requirements to complete structural variant calling much faster than running the programs individually. Parliament2 is available as a Docker container, which pre-installs all required dependencies. This allows users to run any caller with easy installation and execution. This Docker container can easily be deployed in cloud or local environments and is available as an app on DNAnexus.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Morisse ◽  
Fabrice Legeai ◽  
Claire Lemaitre

Linked-Reads technologies, popularized by 10x Genomics, combine the high- quality and low cost of short-reads sequencing with a long-range information by adding barcodes that tag reads originating from the same long DNA fragment. Thanks to their high-quality and long-range information, such reads are thus particularly useful for various applications such as genome scaffolding and structural variant calling. As a result, multiple structural variant calling methods were developed within the last few years. However, these methods were mainly tested on human data, and do not run well on non-human organisms, for which reference genomes are highly fragmented, or sequencing data display high levels of heterozygosity. Moreover, even on human data, most tools still require large amounts of computing resources. We present LEVIATHAN, a new structural variant calling tool that aims to address these issues, and especially better scale and apply to a wide variety of organisms. Our method relies on a barcode index, that allows to quickly compare the similarity of all possible pairs of regions in terms of amount of common barcodes. Region pairs sharing a sufficient number of barcodes are then considered as potential structural variants, and complementary, classical short reads methods are applied to further refine the breakpoint coordinates. Our experiments on simulated data underline that our method compares well to the state-of-the-art, both in terms of recall and precision, and also in terms of resource consumption. Moreover, LEVIATHAN was successfully applied to a real dataset from a non-model organism, while all other tools either failed to run or required unreasonable amounts of resources. LEVIATHAN is implemented in C++, supported on Linux platforms, and available under AGPL-3.0 License at https://github.com/morispi/LEVIATHAN.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel L. Cameron ◽  
Jonathan Baber ◽  
Charles Shale ◽  
Anthony T. Papenfuss ◽  
Jose Espejo Valle-Inclan ◽  
...  

AbstractWe have developed a novel, integrated and comprehensive purity, ploidy, structural variant and copy number somatic analysis toolkit for whole genome sequencing data of paired tumor/normal samples. We show that the combination of using GRIDSS for somatic structural variant calling and PURPLE for somatic copy number alteration calling allows highly sensitive, precise and consistent copy number and structural variant determination, as well as providing novel insights for short structural variants and regions of complex local topology. LINX, an interpretation tool, leverages the integrated structural variant and copy number calling to cluster individual structural variants into higher order events and chains them together to predict local derivative chromosome structure. LINX classifies and extensively annotates genomic rearrangements including simple and reciprocal breaks, LINE, viral and pseudogene insertions, and complex events such as chromothripsis. LINX also comprehensively calls genic fusions including chained fusions. Finally, our toolkit provides novel visualisation methods providing insight into complex genomic rearrangements.


2013 ◽  
Vol 7 (Suppl 6) ◽  
pp. S8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahiro Mimori ◽  
Naoki Nariai ◽  
Kaname Kojima ◽  
Mamoru Takahashi ◽  
Akira Ono ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Talenti ◽  
Jessica Powell ◽  
Johanneke D Hemmink ◽  
Elizabeth AJ Cook ◽  
David Wragg ◽  
...  

Despite only 8% of cattle being found in Europe, European breeds dominate current genetic resources. This adversely impacts cattle research in other important global cattle breeds. To mitigate this issue, we have generated the first assemblies of African breeds, which have been integrated with genomic data for 294 diverse cattle into the first graph genome that incorporates global cattle diversity. We illustrate how this more representative reference assembly contains an extra 116.1Mb (4.2%) of sequence absent from the current Hereford sequence and consequently inaccessible to current studies. We further demonstrate how using this graph genome increases read mapping rates, reduces allelic biases and improves the agreement of structural variant calling with independent optical mapping data. Consequently, we present an improved, more representative, reference assembly that will improve global cattle research.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brent S. Pedersen ◽  
Aaron R. Quinlan

AbstractMost structural variant detection tools use clusters of discordant read-pair and split-read alignments to identify variants, yet do not integrate depth of sequence coverage as an additional means to support or refute putative events. Here, we present duphold, as a new method to efficiently annotate structural variant calls with sequence depth information that can add (or remove) confidence to SV predicted to affect copy number. It indicates not only the change in depth across the event, but also the presence of a rapid change in depth relative to the regions surrounding the breakpoints. It uses a unique algorithm that allows the run time to be nearly independent of the number of variants. This performance is important for large, jointly-called projects with many samples, each of which must be evaluated at thousands of sites. We show that filtering on duphold annotations can greatly improve the specificity of deletion calls and that its annotations match visual inspection. Duphold can annotate structural variant predictions made from both short-read and long-read data. It is available under the MIT license at: https://github.com/brentp/duphold.


Author(s):  
David Heller ◽  
Martin Vingron ◽  
George Church ◽  
Heng Li ◽  
Shilpa Garg

AbstractSegmental duplications are important for understanding human diseases and evolution. The challenge to distinguish allelic and duplication sequences has hindered their phased assembly as well as characterization of structural variant calls. Here we have developed a novel graph-based approach that leverages single nucleotide differences in overlapping reads to distinguish allelic and duplication sequences information from long read accurate PacBio HiFi sequencing. These differences enable to generate allelic and duplication-specific overlaps in the graph to spell out phased assembly used for structural variant calling. We have applied our method to three public genomes: CHM13, NA12878 and HG002. Our method resolved 86% of duplicated regions fully with contig N50 up to 79 kb and produced <800 structural variant phased calls, outperforming state-of-the-part SDA method in terms of all metrics. Furthermore, we demonstrate the importance of phased assemblies and variant calls to the biologically-relevant duplicated genes such as SMN1, SRGAP2C, NPY4R and FAM72A. Our phased assemblies and accurate variant calling specifically in duplicated regions will enable the study of the evolution and adaptation of various species.


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