SNPeff problem
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10 months ago
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I tried to build a local database of bovine ARS-UCD1.2 using SNPeff, and in my annotated results, the SNPS of introns were always the most numerous, and I was very confused

snpEff • 937 views
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Introns comprise a larger percent of the genome than exons, so intronic SNVs being more numerous than exonic SNVs makes sense.

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Thank you! But shouldn't intergenic regions have the most SNVs?

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Fair point. It also depends on the annotations, I think. Do you see other non-coding annotations such as upstream, downstream, etc.?

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yes, I get. I think this is a problem of snpeff, and maybe the annotation of the bovine genome also influenced the results. For the past year, I have had to use Annovar software to get accurate annotation results. I don't know how to solve it. Can you offer any advice? Thank you very much

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I find VEP much better than both snpEff and Annovar, but I work on the human genome. Is there a reason you're looking to switch from Annovar given it provides you with accurate results?

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Thank you, I will try VEP, I think snpEff is more convenient to use.

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It definitely is quite convenient especially compared to VEP's complicated options but VEP is far more detailed plus EnsEMBL is much better annotated than RefSeq IMO but again, I speak from a human context. This may not apply to the bovine genome.

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