BALSA: integrated secondary analysis for whole-genome and whole-exome sequencing, accelerated by GPU

PeerJ. 2014 Jun 3:2:e421. doi: 10.7717/peerj.421. eCollection 2014.

Abstract

This paper reports an integrated solution, called BALSA, for the secondary analysis of next generation sequencing data; it exploits the computational power of GPU and an intricate memory management to give a fast and accurate analysis. From raw reads to variants (including SNPs and Indels), BALSA, using just a single computing node with a commodity GPU board, takes 5.5 h to process 50-fold whole genome sequencing (∼750 million 100 bp paired-end reads), or just 25 min for 210-fold whole exome sequencing. BALSA's speed is rooted at its parallel algorithms to effectively exploit a GPU to speed up processes like alignment, realignment and statistical testing. BALSA incorporates a 16-genotype model to support the calling of SNPs and Indels and achieves competitive variant calling accuracy and sensitivity when compared to the ensemble of six popular variant callers. BALSA also supports efficient identification of somatic SNVs and CNVs; experiments showed that BALSA recovers all the previously validated somatic SNVs and CNVs, and it is more sensitive for somatic Indel detection. BALSA outputs variants in VCF format. A pileup-like SNAPSHOT format, while maintaining the same fidelity as BAM in variant calling, enables efficient storage and indexing, and facilitates the App development of downstream analyses. BALSA is available at: http://sourceforge.net/p/balsa.

Keywords: GPU; Genomics; HPC; NGS; Secondary analysis; Variant calling; Whole-exome sequencing; Whole-genome seqeuncing.

Grants and funding

This work was funded by Hong Kong GRF (General Research Fund) HKU-713512E and ITF (Innovation and Technology Fund) GHP/011/12. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.