LiftOver Howto: Difference between revisions

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Creating a liftOver file is very similar to a whole-genome alignment. This page is based on [[Minimal_Steps_For_LiftOver]], but is even more minimalistic.
Creating a liftOver file is very similar to a whole-genome alignment. A liftOver file a chains file, where for each region in the genome the alignments of the best/longest syntenic regions are used to translate features from one version of a genome to another.
 
With competing assemblies becoming more common, liftOver file is sometimes necessary for group that set up their own browsers.
 
This page is based on [[Minimal_Steps_For_LiftOver]], but is even more minimalistic.


Also see the page [[Whole_genome_alignment_howto]] for some background on tools and terminology.
Also see the page [[Whole_genome_alignment_howto]] for some background on tools and terminology.

Revision as of 10:01, 1 July 2010

Creating a liftOver file is very similar to a whole-genome alignment. A liftOver file a chains file, where for each region in the genome the alignments of the best/longest syntenic regions are used to translate features from one version of a genome to another.

With competing assemblies becoming more common, liftOver file is sometimes necessary for group that set up their own browsers.

This page is based on Minimal_Steps_For_LiftOver, but is even more minimalistic.

Also see the page Whole_genome_alignment_howto for some background on tools and terminology.

Outline

  • BLAT the new genome onto the old genome
  • Sort/Chain/Merge/Split/Net

Alignment

  • My genome is rather small, so I don't do any splitting or lifting steps anywhere, that makes it simpler. If you need to split your genome, see Minimal_Steps_For_LiftOver: The old genome is split in chunks and lifting file is generated. After the alignment of the chunks, the resulting chains are lifted back to the original coordinates.
  • I have repeatmasked my new genome assembly. The masked fa files are in ../ci3/rm/masked
  • The old assembly is called ci2.2bit, the new assembly is in the directory ../ci3. After repeatmasking it's in rm/masked
  • I want the alignment .psl to be in the directory psl, so I did the alignment with
 mkdir psl
 for i in ../ci3/rm/masked/*.masked; do blat ../ci2.2bit $i -tileSize=12 -fastMap -minIdentity=98 psl/`basename $i .fa.masked`.psl -noHead -minScore=100; done
  • Translate psl files to chains in the directory chain:
 mkdir chain
 for i in psl/*.psl; do axtChain -linearGap=medium -psl $i ../ci2.2bit ../ci3/ci3.2bit chain/`basename $i .psl`.chain; done
  • Merge short chains into longer ones into the directory chainMerge:
 mkdir chainMerge
 chainMergeSort chain/*.chain | chainSplit chainMerge stdin -lump=50
  • concat and sort the chains:
 cat chainMerge/*.chain > all.chain
 chainSort all.chain all.sorted.chain
  • Need info about chromosome sizes for netting:
 twoBitInfo ../ci3/ci3.2bit ci3.chromInfo
 twoBitInfo ../ci2.2bit ci2.chromInfo
  • identify alignable regions from chains:
 mkdir net
 chainNet all.sorted.chain ci2.chromInfo ci3.chromInfo net/all.net /dev/null
  • Finally, select the right alignable regions using the nets, creating a "liftOver" file:
 netChainSubset net/all.net all.chain ci2ToCi3.liftOver