Skip to content

Socrates: Identification of genomic rearrangements in tumour genomes by re-aligning soft clipped reads

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jibsch/Socrates

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

56 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

README.txt Authors: Arthur Hsu, Jan Schroeder, Anthony T Papenfuss Date: 27/3/2013


NOTE: There is a new version of Socrates hosted on http://github.com/PapenfussLab/socrates The new release is dependent on Java1.8. Please use this version if possible.

A driver script (developed in Python2.7) - Socrates, can be found in this directory.

The Socrates package contains several Java programs (developed in JDK1.6). Each program is designed to process data for a specific stages of analysis.

A Python driver script - "Socrates", for retaining cross-platform compatibility of Java, is included to, is included to execute the programs.

To use Socrates without the driver script, Java class path needs to be set:

socrates=dirname $0/ libs=${socrates}lib/sam-1.77.jar:${socrates}lib/commons-lang3-3.1.jar:${socrates}lib/commons-cli-1.2.jar:${socrates}lib/picard-1.85.jar:${socrates}lib/snappy-java-1.0.3-rc3.jar java -Xmx4g -cp ${socrates}bin:$libs net.wehi.socrates.[PROG] [OPTIONS]`

where PROG is one of BamStratifier, RealignmentBAM, RealignmentClustering and AnnotatePairedClusters.

While default values have worked satisfactorily in our simulated and real cancer genome sequencing datasets, users should set program parameters in the driver scripts appropriately for their own data. Full lists of program parameters are provided in the following sections, together with a discussion on the impact of changing them where applicable.

1.1. Preprocess BAM File

Stratifies the original BAM file into...

usage: Socrates preprocess [options] alignment bam

-b, --base-quality Minimum average base quality score of soft clipped sequence [default: 5]

-h, --help print this message

-k, --keep-duplicate keep duplicate reads [default: false]

-l, --long-sc-len Length threshold of long soft-clip [default: 25 (bp)]

-p, --percent-id Minimum alignment percent identity to reference [default: 95 (%)]

-q, --min-mapq Minimum alignments mapq [default: 5]

-t, --threads Number of threads to use [default: 1]

-v, --verbose be verbose of progress

Minimum base quality option:

A reasonable threshold helps removing low quality soft clips that could lead to erroneous breakpoint calls.

Long soft clip length:

Studies have shown that longer the sequences the more likely they can be uniquely placed in a genome. In an early study, it is demonstrated that while percentage of unique mapping improves with increasing read length, the rate of gain di- minishes past 25nt ( 80% at 25nt and 90% at 40nt). If value for this parameter is too low, many non-unique soft clips will be produced and impact on system requirement, processing time and reliability of results downstream. On the other hand, too high the value results in low number of long soft clips and hence risk of missing breakpoints. Percent identity: We often observe higher-than-expected base mismatch rate for reads in satellite, centromeric and telomeric regions where correctness of alignments can be con- tentious. Minimum percent identity threshold, which is equivalent to maximum allowable mismatch rate, can greatly reduce these erroneous alignments.

Minimum mapping quality:

Higher mapping quality, while may not guarantee unique align- ment, is sufficient to exclude multi-mapping anchor alignments from further analysis for Bowtie2 and BWA aligned reads.

1.2. Process the re-alignment BAM file

usage: Socrates realignment [options] input_bam output_bam

input_bam Re-aligned soft clip BAM file. Use “-” to accept input from stdin

output_bam Output re-alignment BAM with anchor info merged

anchor_info Anchor info file produced by BAMStratifier

This program merges soft clip re-alignment BAM file with anchor alignment information. The program has built-in sorting mechanism and therefore can take unsorted, raw re- alignment output from aligner. While the program accepts input BAM file from standard input channel, this requires more system memory for buffering.

1.3. Predict rearrangements

usage: Socrates predict [options] realigned_sc_bam short_sc_bam metrics_file

-f, --flank Size of flank for promiscuity filter [default: 50 (bp)]

-h, --help print this message

-i, --ideal-only Use only proper pair 5’ SC and anomalous pair 3’ SC [default: false]

-l, --long-sc-len Length threshold of long soft-clip [default: 25 (bp)]

-m, --promiscuity Exclude cluster if more than [promiscuity] clusters within [flank]bp of a break

-p, --percent-id Minimum realignment percent identity to reference [default: 95 (%)]

-q, --min-mapq Minimum realignments mapq [default: 2]

-c, --short-sc-cluster Search for short soft clip cluster support for unpaired clusters

-s, --max-support Maximum realignment support to search for short SC cluster [default: 30]

-t, --threads Number of threads to use [default: 3]

-v, --verbose be verbose of progress

The rearrangement predictor is the main part of the algorithm. It clusters the split reads, and then pairs clusters to form the output. There are two files generated: the paired and unpiared outputs. The paired output contains the best results, while the unpaired contains any soft-clips that have realigned anywhere else in the process re-alignments stage of the algorithm. The unpaired results are included for completeness as they can contain some useful information, but overall this output is comprised of false positives due to mapping errors and other artefacts. The paired output contains various columns of information that describe the location of the break point and the level of support:

  1. C1_realign - this genomic locus describes the position of the realigned soft-clips of cluster 1. The position is a consensus if the realignements are not exactly the same for all soft-clips. The locus is that of the first soft- clipped base, so the one immediately next to the breakpoint.
  2. C1_realign_dir - this field takes either "+" or "-" and indicates whether the realigned softclips map upstream of C1_realign (+) or downstream (-) -- with respect to the reference genome.
  3. C1_realign_consensus - a consensus sequence made of soft-clips in cluster 1. An asterisk optionally marks the position of the breakpoint within the consensus (if the position was unanimous).
  4. C1_anchor - a second locus describing the anchor region of the cluster. The anchor is defined by the reads that were mapped in the initial alignments and which soft-clips formed the earlier columns. The postion is the consensus of positions before the first soft-clipped base.
  5. C1_anchor_dir - analogous to above this field describes whether the anchor region is upstream ("+") or downstream ("-") of the breakpoint in the reference.
  6. C1_anchor_consensus - the consensus sequence of the anchor reads.
  7. C1_long_support - this number counts the number of "long" soft-clips (as specified during the run of Socrates) that support the cluster C1. This number is at least 1, as there would not be a cluster without a realigned soft-clip.
  8. C1_long_support_bases - the number of nucleotides in the long support of the preceding column counted and reported in this column.
  9. C1_short_support - similarly, the short support is counted in number...
  10. C1_short_support_bases - ... and nucleotides.
  11. C1_short_support_max_len - the length of the longest SC in this support group.
  12. C1_avg_realign_mapq - this last column for C1 summarizes the average mapping quality of the anchor reads. It can be a helpful filter criteria and a minimum value can be specified at the launch of Socrates. 13-24. C2 columns - all columns described above are repeated for C2. There is only one noticeable difference: C2 can be a cluster formed without realigned soft-clips (see "short SC cluster" below), which leads to empty consensus sequences (there are double-tabs in the output, which can be quite nasty to deal with. Apologies!) and long-support values set to 0. Finally, the column labelled "BP_condition" describes the nature of the fusion event. It can take any of five values:
  13. Blunt-end joining: the most straight forward case of a clean join (none of the below).
  14. Micro-homology: Xbp homology found! (XXX): the two joined regions are identical for X bases across the break. Therefore the true location of the breakpoint is only known within those boundaries.
  15. Inserted sequence: XXX: There is a short bit of sequence inserted in between the two loci of the fusion. The sequence is either untemplated or from somewhere else in the genome (but too short to map).
  16. unequal distances of realigned breakpoint to anchor breakpoint: X v Y: In this case the realignment and anchor loci of the two paired clusters do not support the exact same coordinate for a fusion (|X-Y| indicates the difference). This is usually due to mis-mappings.
  17. Unequal inserted sequence: XXX v Y: an insert occurs as above, but Socrates was unable to determine the exact sequence. One of the values should contain the correct sequence.
  18. short SC cluster: In most experiments the most prevalent type, yet the least trustworthy. Only one side of the breakpoint is supported by realiged split reads, the other by short bits of soft-clipped sequence only. This sort of cluster pairing makes Socrates very sensitive, but introduces false positives.

1.4. Annotating rearrangements

usage: Socrates annotate [options] socrates_paired_cluster_output

-n, --normal Socrates paired breakpoint calls for normal sample

-r, --repeatmask UCSC repeat masker track file in BED format, Tabix indexed.

1.5. Structural variant types The current version of Socrates does not support typing of variants as other tools do. The reasoning is that typing events can interfere with the inter- pretation of results as they might be too suggestive. For example, insertions (of novel sequence) and deletions have the same brekapoint signature. This signature is commonly referred to as the deletion type. The deletion type is also involved in other, more complex rearrangements. We therefore have so far refained from annotating these types. However, for the sake of completeness, here are the type signatures relating to Socrates breakpoints (let us assume that C1 realign and C1 anchor are on the same chromosome and C1 realign pos < C1 anchor pos): C1_realign_dir + & C1_anchor_dir -: DELETION TYPE C1_realign_dir - & C1_anchor_dir +: TANDEM DUPLICATION TYPE C1_realign_dir + & C1_anchor_dir +: INVERSION TYPE (I) C1_realign_dir - & C1_anchor_dir -: INVERSION TYPE (II) If C1 and C2 are on different chromsomes, the consensus for types is not as clearly defined as those types above.

About

Socrates: Identification of genomic rearrangements in tumour genomes by re-aligning soft clipped reads

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •