A new fast phasing method based on haplotype subtraction

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2019Source: The Journal of Molecular DiagnosticsAuthor(s): Evelina Mocci, Marija Debeljak, Alison P. Klein, James R. EshlemanAbstractWe developed a novel phasing approach, based solely on molecules and genotype frequency, and that does not rely on inference of new alleles. We initiated the project because of errors that were detected in the phased 1000 genomes data. The algorithm first combined identical genotypes into clusters and ranked them by descending frequency. Using alleles defined in homozygotes, it combined them to produce expected genotypes that were dismissed, and subtracted them from remaining genotypes to define additional new putative alleles. Putative alleles had to be confirmed by identifying them in independent genotypes, and the process was iterated until all alleles were identified. The new approach was validated using single molecule sequencing of eight loci, 145 (8-35/locus) alleles were identified, and an average 98.2% (95.0% to 99.9%) of 1000 genomes individuals at these loci were explained. The accuracy of the new method was compared with that from PHASE and SHAPEIT2 to the experimentally determined genotypes based on single molecule sequencing. Our method was comparable to PHASE and SHAPEIT2 in accuracy, but was on average 14.6 and 10.8 fold faster, respectively.
Source: The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics - Category: Pathology Source Type: research
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