A statistical framework for detecting mislabeled and contaminated samples using shallow-depth sequence data.

BMC Bioinformatics

RW Holley Center for Agriculture and Health, United States Department of Agriculture -- Agricultural Research Service, School of Integrative Plant Sciences, Cornell University, 258 Emerson Hall, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers often sequence an individual's DNA multiple times to ensure accuracy, but before merging this data, it's crucial to check for errors like contamination or sample mix-ups.
  • Existing error detection methods are often not compatible with low- to moderate-depth data and typically use pairwise comparisons, making results hard to interpret.
  • The new method introduced, called BIGRED, uses Bayes Theorem for a more comprehensive error check on any sequence depth, showing high accuracy in simulations and available as an R package.

Article Abstract

Background: Researchers typically sequence a given individual multiple times, either re-sequencing the same DNA sample (technical replication) or sequencing different DNA samples collected on the same individual (biological replication) or both. Before merging the data from these replicate sequence runs, it is important to verify that no errors, such as DNA contamination or mix-ups, occurred during the data collection pipeline. Methods to detect such errors exist but are often ad hoc, cannot handle missing data and several require phased data. Because they require some combination of genotype calling, imputation, and haplotype phasing, these methods are unsuitable for error detection in low- to moderate-depth sequence data where such tasks are difficult to perform accurately. Additionally, because most existing methods employ a pairwise-comparison approach for error detection rather than joint analysis of the putative replicates, results may be difficult to interpret.

Results: We introduce a new method for error detection suitable for shallow-, moderate-, and high-depth sequence data. Using Bayes Theorem, we calculate the posterior probability distribution over the set of relations describing the putative replicates and infer which of the samples originated from an identical genotypic source.

Conclusions: Our method addresses key limitations of existing approaches and produced highly accurate results in simulation experiments. Our method is implemented as an R package called BIGRED (Bayes Inferred Genotype Replicate Error Detector), which is freely available for download: https://github.com/ac2278/BIGRED .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6292093PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12859-018-2512-8DOI Listing

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