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Assessing structural variation in a personal genome—towards a human reference diploid genome
Authors:Adam C English  William J Salerno  Oliver A Hampton  Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui  Shruthi Ambreth  Deborah I Ritter  Christine R Beck  Caleb F Davis  Mahmoud Dahdouli  Singer Ma  Andrew Carroll  Narayanan Veeraraghavan  Jeremy Bruestle  Becky Drees  Alex Hastie  Ernest T Lam  Simon White  Pamela Mishra  Min Wang  Yi Han  Feng Zhang  Pawel Stankiewicz  David A Wheeler  Jeffrey G Reid  Donna M Muzny  Jeffrey Rogers  Aniko Sabo  Kim C Worley  James R Lupski  Eric Boerwinkle  Richard A Gibbs
Abstract:

Background

Characterizing large genomic variants is essential to expanding the research and clinical applications of genome sequencing. While multiple data types and methods are available to detect these structural variants (SVs), they remain less characterized than smaller variants because of SV diversity, complexity, and size. These challenges are exacerbated by the experimental and computational demands of SV analysis. Here, we characterize the SV content of a personal genome with Parliament, a publicly available consensus SV-calling infrastructure that merges multiple data types and SV detection methods.

Results

We demonstrate Parliament’s efficacy via integrated analyses of data from whole-genome array comparative genomic hybridization, short-read next-generation sequencing, long-read (Pacific BioSciences RSII), long-insert (Illumina Nextera), and whole-genome architecture (BioNano Irys) data from the personal genome of a single subject (HS1011). From this genome, Parliament identified 31,007 genomic loci between 100 bp and 1 Mbp that are inconsistent with the hg19 reference assembly. Of these loci, 9,777 are supported as putative SVs by hybrid local assembly, long-read PacBio data, or multi-source heuristics. These SVs span 59 Mbp of the reference genome (1.8%) and include 3,801 events identified only with long-read data. The HS1011 data and complete Parliament infrastructure, including a BAM-to-SV workflow, are available on the cloud-based service DNAnexus.

Conclusions

HS1011 SV analysis reveals the limits and advantages of multiple sequencing technologies, specifically the impact of long-read SV discovery. With the full Parliament infrastructure, the HS1011 data constitute a public resource for novel SV discovery, software calibration, and personal genome structural variation analysis.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-015-1479-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Keywords:Structural variation  Long-read sequencing  SV software
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