Accurate detection of complex structural variations using single-molecule sequencing.

Published in Nature Methods, 2018

FJ. Sedlazeck, P. Rescheneder, M. Smolka, H. Fang, M. Nattestad, A. Haeseler, MC. Schatz (2018). "Accurate detection of complex structural variations using single-molecule sequencing." Nature Methods. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41592-018-0001-7

Structural variations are the greatest source of genetic variation, but they remain poorly understood because of technological limitations. Single-molecule long-read sequencing has the potential to dramatically advance the field, although high error rates are a challenge with existing methods. Addressing this need, we introduce open-source methods for long-read alignment (NGMLR; https://github.com/philres/ngmlr) and structural variant identification (Sniffles; https://github.com/fritzsedlazeck/Sniffles) that provide unprecedented sensitivity and precision for variant detection, even in repeat-rich regions and for complex nested events that can have substantial effects on human health. In several long-read datasets, including healthy and cancerous human genomes, we discovered thousands of novel variants and categorized systematic errors in short-read approaches. NGMLR and Sniffles can automatically filter false events and operate on low-coverage data, thereby reducing the high costs that have hindered the application of long reads in clinical and research settings.

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