current
May 12th, 2017 at 4:30pm
Overview
Abstract
Rapid advances in high-throughput sequencing facilitate variant discovery and genotyping, but linking variants into a single haplotype remains challenging. Here we demonstrate HaploSeq, an approach for assembling chromosome-scale haplotypes by exploiting the existence of 'chromosome territories'. We use proximity ligation and sequencing to show that alleles on homologous chromosomes occupy distinct territories, and therefore this experimental protocol preferentially recovers physically linked DNA variants on a homolog. Computational analysis of such data sets allows for accurate ( approximately 99.5%) reconstruction of chromosome-spanning haplotypes for approximately 95% of alleles in hybrid mouse cells with 30x sequencing coverage. To resolve haplotypes for a human genome, which has a low density of variants, we coupled HaploSeq with local conditional phasing to obtain haplotypes for approximately 81% of alleles with approximately 98% accuracy from just 17x sequencing. Whereas methods based on proximity ligation were originally designed to investigate spatial organization of genomes, our results lend support for their use as a general tool for haplotyping.
Journal
Nature biotechnology
PMID:24185094
Published
December 9th, 2013