Variation graph toolkit improves read mapping by representing genetic variation in the reference

Erik Garrison, Jouni Sirén, Adam M. Novak, Glenn Hickey, Jordan M. Eizenga, Eric T. Dawson, William Jones, Shilpa Garg, Charles Markello, Michael F. Lin, Benedict Paten, Richard Durbin

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

405 Citationer (Scopus)

Abstract

Reference genomes guide our interpretation of DNA sequence data. However, conventional linear references represent only one version of each locus, ignoring variation in the population. Poor representation of an individual's genome sequence impacts read mapping and introduces bias. Variation graphs are bidirected DNA sequence graphs that compactly represent genetic variation across a population, including large-scale structural variation such as inversions and duplications. Previous graph genome software implementations have been limited by scalability or topological constraints. Here we present vg, a toolkit of computational methods for creating, manipulating, and using these structures as references at the scale of the human genome. vg provides an efficient approach to mapping reads onto arbitrary variation graphs using generalized compressed suffix arrays, with improved accuracy over alignment to a linear reference, and effectively removing reference bias. These capabilities make using variation graphs as references for DNA sequencing practical at a gigabase scale, or at the topological complexity of de novo assemblies.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftNature Biotechnology
Vol/bind36
Udgave nummer9
Sider (fra-til)875-879
Antal sider5
ISSN1087-0156
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2018
Udgivet eksterntJa

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