Back to Search Start Over

SHEAR: sample heterogeneity estimation and assembly by reference

Authors :
Tae Hyun Hwang
Kevin A. T. Silverstein
Scott M. Dehm
Vipin Kumar
Sean R. Landman
Michael Steinbach
Yingming Li
Source :
BMC Genomics
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2014.

Abstract

Background Personal genome assembly is a critical process when studying tumor genomes and other highly divergent sequences. The accuracy of downstream analyses, such as RNA-seq and ChIP-seq, can be greatly enhanced by using personal genomic sequences rather than standard references. Unfortunately, reads sequenced from these types of samples often have a heterogeneous mix of various subpopulations with different variants, making assembly extremely difficult using existing assembly tools. To address these challenges, we developed SHEAR (Sample Heterogeneity Estimation and Assembly by Reference;http://vk.cs.umn.edu/SHEAR), a tool that predicts SVs, accounts for heterogeneous variants by estimating their representative percentages, and generates personal genomic sequences to be used for downstream analysis. Results By making use of structural variant detection algorithms, SHEAR offers improved performance in the form of a stronger ability to handle difficult structural variant types and better computational efficiency. We compare against the lead competing approach using a variety of simulated scenarios as well as real tumor cell line data with known heterogeneous variants. SHEAR is shown to successfully estimate heterogeneity percentages in both cases, and demonstrates an improved efficiency and better ability to handle tandem duplications. Conclusion SHEAR allows for accurate and efficient SV detection and personal genomic sequence generation. It is also able to account for heterogeneous sequencing samples, such as from tumor tissue, by estimating the subpopulation percentage for each heterogeneous variant.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712164
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Genomics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf28359fe5586b738675c0a8e282b9ec