Aligning distant sequences to graphs using long seed sketches [METHOD]

Sequence-to-graph alignment is crucial for applications such as variant genotyping, read error correction, and genome assembly. We propose a novel seeding approach that relies on long inexact matches rather than short exact matches, and show that it yields a better time-accuracy trade-off in settings with up to a 25% mutation rate. We use sketches of a subset of graph nodes, which are more robust to indels, and store them in a k-nearest neighbor index to avoid the curse of dimensionality. Our approach contrasts with existing methods and highlights the important role that sketching into vector space can play in bioinformatics applications. We show that our method scales to graphs with 1 billion nodes and has quasi-logarithmic query time for queries with an edit distance of 25%. For such queries, longer sketch-based seeds yield a 4 x increase in recall compared with exact seeds. Our approach can be incorporated into other aligners, providing a novel direction for sequence-to-graph alignment.
Source: Genome Research - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Tags: METHOD Source Type: research
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