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A diploid assembly-based benchmark for variants in the major histocompatibility complex.

Chen-Shan ChinJustin WagnerQiandong ZengErik GarrisonShilpa GargArkarachai FungtammasanMikko RautiainenSergey AganezovMelanie KirscheSamantha ZarateMichael C SchatzChunlin XiaoWilliam J RowellCharles MarkelloJesse FarekFritz J SedlazeckVikas BansalByunggil YooNeil A MillerXin ZhouAndrew CarrollAlvaro Martinez BarrioMarc SalitTobias MarschallAlexander T DiltheyJustin M Zook
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Most human genomes are characterized by aligning individual reads to the reference genome, but accurate long reads and linked reads now enable us to construct accurate, phased de novo assemblies. We focus on a medically important, highly variable, 5 million base-pair (bp) region where diploid assembly is particularly useful - the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC). Here, we develop a human genome benchmark derived from a diploid assembly for the openly-consented Genome in a Bottle sample HG002. We assemble a single contig for each haplotype, align them to the reference, call phased small and structural variants, and define a small variant benchmark for the MHC, covering 94% of the MHC and 22368 variants smaller than 50 bp, 49% more variants than a mapping-based benchmark. This benchmark reliably identifies errors in mapping-based callsets, and enables performance assessment in regions with much denser, complex variation than regions covered by previous benchmarks.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • high resolution
  • endothelial cells
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • dna methylation
  • high density
  • gene expression
  • patient safety