Considerations for Analyzing Targeted NGS Data Exome Tim Hague, CTO
3 sets of full exome sequences for the same individual, targeted by 3 different kits One set had data problems because reads were from 2 different sequencers Remaining 2 sets were analyzed both by the customer and by Omixon Exome Analysis
Illumina TruSeq ~62 Mbp Nimblegen SeqCap EZ Exome ~64 Mbp ~35 Mbp overlap between targets Exons, ORFs and putative translated regions captured 40M and 37M read pairs resp., 101bp length Exome Targets
In this case we are comparing two full NGS analysis pipelines Including the mapping/alignment and a multi-step variant call pipeline The Omixon pipeline for this analysis uses two variant callers The Omixon pipeline also uses recalibration and indel realignment Full Analysis Pipelines
Finding Long Indels 1.
Better Indel Resolution 1.
Better Indel Resolution 2.
If indels are important to an analysis then this needs to be taken into account, from the planning stage onwards BWA does better when indel realignment is used, in combination with paired data Indel Handling
Less Low Quality False Positives
Some of these low quality variants can be removed by filtering, after variant call Quality and coverage cut-offs have to be parameterized properly in the alignment and variant call Quality recalibration can also help to reduce low quality false positives Quality and Coverage
Variations Next to Coding Areas
Most of the exon kits also provide variant calls close to the coding regions These should be included in the analysis if possible Splicing and Promoters
Less False Positives in Complex Regions 1.
Less False Positives in Complex Regions 2.
Less False Positives in Complex Regions 3.
Less False Positives in Complex Regions 4. Higher Coverage
Less False Positives in Complex Regions 5. Lower Coverage
Mismappings due to pseudogenes or repeats – or just complex regions? Sometime more coverage can actually be bad Need to watch out for non-specific read mappings (reads mapping to multiple places) Complex Regions
Regions Where Both Aligners are Confused 1.
Regions Where Both Aligners are Confused 2.
Some regions are extremely difficult to map with any techniques A different approach may be required to mapping/alignment A different approach may be required to variant call (local de novo, phasing etc) Very Complex Regions
Problems with Sex Chromosomes There are may heterozygous calls in the X and Y chromosomes that are certainly false positives or incorrect calls. This is true for both pipelines, the read specificity and variant call procedure has to be improved for these chromosomes.
These kinds of comparative studies can be useful in analyzing the effectiveness of exome sequencing Different exome kits can give different results The data analysis and variant call tools chosen for the analysis can also have a big impact There is some potential to improve the quality of the customer's exome analysis pipeline Summary
Contact Tim Hague, CEO Omixon Biocomputing Solutions