Towards pan-genome read alignment to improve variation calling

BMC Genomics. 2018 May 9;19(Suppl 2):87. doi: 10.1186/s12864-018-4465-8.

Abstract

Background: Typical human genome differs from the reference genome at 4-5 million sites. This diversity is increasingly catalogued in repositories such as ExAC/gnomAD, consisting of >15,000 whole-genomes and >126,000 exome sequences from different individuals. Despite this enormous diversity, resequencing data workflows are still based on a single human reference genome. Identification and genotyping of genetic variants is typically carried out on short-read data aligned to a single reference, disregarding the underlying variation.

Results: We propose a new unified framework for variant calling with short-read data utilizing a representation of human genetic variation - a pan-genomic reference. We provide a modular pipeline that can be seamlessly incorporated into existing sequencing data analysis workflows. Our tool is open source and available online: https://gitlab.com/dvalenzu/PanVC .

Conclusions: Our experiments show that by replacing a standard human reference with a pan-genomic one we achieve an improvement in single-nucleotide variant calling accuracy and in short indel calling accuracy over the widely adopted Genome Analysis Toolkit (GATK) in difficult genomic regions.

Keywords: Pan-genome reference; Read alignment; Variation calling.

MeSH terms

  • Access to Information
  • Genetic Variation*
  • Genome, Human
  • Humans
  • Internet
  • Sequence Alignment
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA / methods*
  • Software
  • Workflow