Benchmarking long-read genome sequence alignment tools for human genomics applications

Author:

LoTempio Jonathan12,Delot Emmanuele34,Vilain Eric12

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Clinical and Translational Science, University of California, Irvine, CA, United States of America

2. International Research Laboratory (IRL2006) “Epigenetics, Data, Politics (EpiDaPo)”, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Washington, DC, United States of America

3. Center for Genetic Medicine Research, Children’s National Hospital, Washington, DC, United States of America

4. Department of Genomics and Precision Medicine, George Washington University, Washington, DC, United States of America

Abstract

Background The utility of long-read genome sequencing platforms has been shown in many fields including whole genome assembly, metagenomics, and amplicon sequencing. Less clear is the applicability of long reads to reference-guided human genomics, which is the foundation of genomic medicine. Here, we benchmark available platform-agnostic alignment tools on datasets from nanopore and single-molecule real-time platforms to understand their suitability in producing a genome representation. Results For this study, we leveraged publicly-available data from sample NA12878 generated on Oxford Nanopore and sample NA24385 on Pacific Biosciences platforms. We employed state of the art sequence alignment tools including GraphMap2, long-read aligner (LRA), Minimap2, CoNvex Gap-cost alignMents for Long Reads (NGMLR), and Winnowmap2. Minimap2 and Winnowmap2 were computationally lightweight enough for use at scale, while GraphMap2 was not. NGMLR took a long time and required many resources, but produced alignments each time. LRA was fast, but only worked on Pacific Biosciences data. Each tool widely disagreed on which reads to leave unaligned, affecting the end genome coverage and the number of discoverable breakpoints. No alignment tool independently resolved all large structural variants (1,001–100,000 base pairs) present in the Database of Genome Variants (DGV) for sample NA12878 or the truthset for NA24385. Conclusions These results suggest a combined approach is needed for LRS alignments for human genomics. Specifically, leveraging alignments from three tools will be more effective in generating a complete picture of genomic variability. It should be best practice to use an analysis pipeline that generates alignments with both Minimap2 and Winnowmap2 as they are lightweight and yield different views of the genome. Depending on the question at hand, the data available, and the time constraints, NGMLR and LRA are good options for a third tool. If computational resources and time are not a factor for a given case or experiment, NGMLR will provide another view, and another chance to resolve a case. LRA, while fast, did not work on the nanopore data for our cluster, but PacBio results were promising in that those computations completed faster than Minimap2. Due to its significant burden on computational resources and slow run time, Graphmap2 is not an ideal tool for exploration of a whole human genome generated on a long-read sequencing platform.

Funder

Molecular Genetics at Children’s National Hospital

The National Human Genome Research Institute

The University of California, Irvine’s Institute for Clinical and Translational Science, and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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