Description
This track displays regions of the reference genome that have exceptionally high
sequence depth, inferred from alignments of short-read sequences from the
1000 Genomes Project.
These regions may be caused by collapsed repetitive sequences
in the reference genome assembly; they also have high read depth in assays such as
ChIP-seq, and may trigger false positive calls from peak-calling algorithms.
Excluding these regions from analysis of short-read alignments should reduce
such false positive calls.
Methods
Pickrell et al. downloaded sequencing reads for 57 Yoruba individuals
from the 1000 Genomes Project's low-coverage pilot data, mapped them to the
Mar. 2006 human genome assembly (NCBI36/hg18), computed the read depth for
every base in the genome, and compiled a distribution of read depths.
They then identified contiguous regions where read depth exceeded thresholds
corresponding to the top 0.001, 0.005, 0.01, 0.05 and 0.1 of the per-base
read depths, merging regions which fall within 50 bases of each other.
The regions are available for download from
http://eqtl.uchicago.edu/Masking/
(see the
readme file).
Credits
Thanks to Joseph Pickrell at the University of Chicago for these data.
References
Pickrell JK, Gaffney DJ, Gilad Y, Pritchard JK.
False positive peaks in ChIP-seq and other sequencing-based
functional assays caused by unannotated high copy number regions.
Bioinformatics. 2011 Aug 1;27(15):2144-6. Epub 2011 Jun 19.
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