Discovery and genotyping of structural variation from long-read haploid genome sequence data

John Huddleston(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Mark Chaisson(University of Washington), Karyn Meltz Steinberg(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Wes Warren(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Kendra Hoekzema(University of Washington), David Gordon(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Tina A. Graves-Lindsay(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Katherine M. Munson(University of Washington), Zev Kronenberg(University of Washington), Laura Vives(University of Washington), Paul Peluso(Pacific Biosciences (United States)), Matthew Boitano(Pacific Biosciences (United States)), Chen-Shin Chin(Pacific Biosciences (United States)), Jonas Korlach(Pacific Biosciences (United States)), Richard K. Wilson(University of Pittsburgh), Evan E. Eichler(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Genome Research
November 28, 2016
Cited by 425Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

In an effort to more fully understand the full spectrum of human genetic variation, we generated deep single-molecule, real-time (SMRT) sequencing data from two haploid human genomes. By using an assembly-based approach (SMRT-SV), we systematically assessed each genome independently for structural variants (SVs) and indels resolving the sequence structure of 461,553 genetic variants from 2 bp to 28 kbp in length. We find that >89% of these variants have been missed as part of analysis of the 1000 Genomes Project even after adjusting for more common variants (MAF > 1%). We estimate that this theoretical human diploid differs by as much as ∼16 Mbp with respect to the human reference, with long-read sequencing data providing a fivefold increase in sensitivity for genetic variants ranging in size from 7 bp to 1 kbp compared with short-read sequence data. Although a large fraction of genetic variants were not detected by short-read approaches, once the alternate allele is sequence-resolved, we show that 61% of SVs can be genotyped in short-read sequence data sets with high accuracy. Uncoupling discovery from genotyping thus allows for the majority of this missed common variation to be genotyped in the human population. Interestingly, when we repeat SV detection on a pseudodiploid genome constructed in silico by merging the two haploids, we find that ∼59% of the heterozygous SVs are no longer detected by SMRT-SV. These results indicate that haploid resolution of long-read sequencing data will significantly increase sensitivity of SV detection.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis