Bit-parallel sequence-to-graph alignment

Bioinformatics. 2019 Oct 1;35(19):3599-3607. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btz162.

Abstract

Motivation: Graphs are commonly used to represent sets of sequences. Either edges or nodes can be labeled by sequences, so that each path in the graph spells a concatenated sequence. Examples include graphs to represent genome assemblies, such as string graphs and de Bruijn graphs, and graphs to represent a pan-genome and hence the genetic variation present in a population. Being able to align sequencing reads to such graphs is a key step for many analyses and its applications include genome assembly, read error correction and variant calling with respect to a variation graph.

Results: We generalize two linear sequence-to-sequence algorithms to graphs: the Shift-And algorithm for exact matching and Myers' bitvector algorithm for semi-global alignment. These linear algorithms are both based on processing w sequence characters with a constant number of operations, where w is the word size of the machine (commonly 64), and achieve a speedup of up to w over naive algorithms. For a graph with |V| nodes and |E| edges and a sequence of length m, our bitvector-based graph alignment algorithm reaches a worst case runtime of O(|V|+⌈mw⌉|E| log w) for acyclic graphs and O(|V|+m|E| log w) for arbitrary cyclic graphs. We apply it to five different types of graphs and observe a speedup between 3-fold and 20-fold compared with a previous (asymptotically optimal) alignment algorithm.

Availability and implementation: https://github.com/maickrau/GraphAligner.

Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Genome*
  • Sequence Alignment
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA