Is Aligning While Considering Splicing The Same As Alignment Against The Full Set Of Transcripts
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13.4 years ago
Doctoroots ▴ 800

Hi All, a general question: is aligning using a splicing considering aligner (e.g TopHat) to a reference genome the same as aligning with a non splicing considerate aligner (e.g bwa) but against the full set of transcripts for that genome?

if not, what are the advantages / disadvantages of each?

splicing alignment transcriptome • 2.9k views
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Just a comment--cufflinks is not an aligner. The most common aligner to use in conjunction with cufflinks is tophat.

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to clarify our terminology a bit Cufflinks is a "transcript analysis tool" that is designed to work with the "splice junction inference tool" Tophat, which itself relies on the decidedly non-splicey short-read mapper Bowtie.

True splice-aware aligners like GMAP, CAP3, BLAT do not work well with <100bp reads.

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thanks for the comment, changed.

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... but see GSNAP which "can detect splicing, multiple mismatches, long indels and combinations thereof, up to a user-specified point total, limited to a single splice or indel per read, provided the read (or parts of the read on each end of the indel or splice) has a consecutive stretch of 14 nt that match the reference sequence. (http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/26/7/873.full)

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One downside of GSNAP (currently, if I recall) is that it does not accept fastq, but only fasta. I do not know how much of a difference it makes as reads are quite a bit longer making the likelihood of mapping to the wrong location based on low-quality data more unlikely than with the shorter reads of a couple of years ago.

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13.4 years ago
Michael 54k

Main disadvantage of the non-splicing aware alignments: you wouldn't be able to detect something that's not in your database of transcripts, e.g. new splice variants, unknown splice sites, or unknown transcripts, wrongly annotated splice sites, etc.. You simply would not see them. Aligning against the transcripts might be good for transcript quantification/ counting, but I would think both methods are best used to complement each other.

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No - the point of TopHat, MapSplice and others is that you don't need to supply them with a reference file; they can detect splice sites "de novo". The fact that you can give (some of them) a reference file and quantify what's in there is a different matter.

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What do you mean with spl. considerate aligners? If you take TopHat (splice junction finder) and Cufflinks (transcript assembly) for example, these are algorithms relying on an aligner (bowtie) One provides a reference sequence for the alignment, but neither tool needs extra annotations.

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thanks for the answer Michael, about the unknown / novel splice variants - since most of the splicing considerate aligners i know require an additional reference file containing the splice sites / exons - it can also miss unknown splice variants no?

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you are right, for some reason i was under the impression that TopHat needed a splice junctions reference file

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