Entering edit mode
3.7 years ago
L_to_the_m
▴
10
Hi, I have a dataset of 451 diploid humans in PLINK2. When trying to get the count report of the minor alleles in PLINK2 with this code:
plink2 --pfile file --freq counts
I will get a table like this:
CHROM ID REF ALT ALT_CTS OBS_CT
1 AX-13191280__rs3131972 G A 169 902
1 AX-32225497__rs3131962 G A 139 900
1 AX-11214939__rs12562034 G A 84 902
1 AX-32355233__rs12131377 C G 59 894
1 AX-32359895__rs61768212 G C 452 898
1 AX-32365087__rs11240779 A G 222 900
1 AX-32366075__rs57181708 A G 90 898
1 AX-40293871__rs4970383 C A 222 898
1 AX-32432755__rs4970382 T C 352 900
1 AX-40308003__rs950122 G C 183 902
1 AX-32459995__rs13303222 G A 136 900
1 AX-32461903__rs6657440 T C 330 902
1 AX-32488633__rs4970459 C T 192 902
1 AX-32519659__rs74047407 G A 209 900
1 AX-40357457__rs1110052 T G 249 902
1 AX-32571027__rs2272757 A G 306 900
1 AX-32572119__rs35471880 G A 67 894
1 AX-32598061__rs13303065 T C 307 900
1 AX-40388697__rs13303010 A G 86 900
But sometimes I get a Alternate allele count which is for example ALT_CTS= 452
(as in line 5). How can this be since I only have 451 diploid individuals? Is it then then still the minor allele?
Couldn't one sample have more than one alteration?
This makes sense, and then the number is the sum of all minor alleles? And in total this result in a bigger number?
That is what I would assume. I would definitely look into it closer. I've had a similar problem before but the issue was more clear where
ALT
looked more likeC,A
instead of justC