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  • CLC Bio vs. Trinity for de novo transcriptome assembly

    Hi there,

    I have some questions regarding CLC Bio vs. Trinity for de novo RNA seq assembly. When I was told how to process my data by a postdoc in my lab, he insisted on using CLC Bio, on the default setting. I've looked into CLC Bio and I'm not sure if this is the correct way to go about things. But before I step away from a published methodology, I have to convince my supervisor too. That's where I hope you can help me.

    The data:
    1/ Eukaryotic, single celled algae - dinoflagellates. The phylum is particularly known for bizaare genetic elements:
    - 0.5 to 40 x genetic content of human haploid genome
    - mRNA frequently reinserted into genome, i.e.. a mine field of truncated paralogs. They are the hoarders of the genetic world.
    - ancient lineage, they've had a long time to accumulate paralogs. Some rDNA genes have in excess of 2000 copies, most phylogenetic analyses of the order that I work with are rubbish because of this.
    - they have a different, still unknown mode of gene regulation, appears to be post-transcriptional. I.e. mRNA seq data is massive and gives us a pretty good idea about the genome. We think.
    - hence, no reference genomes or even transcriptomes available.
    2/ Working with sequencing data from both public database (MMETSP) and my own work. Some of the former is really quite low quality.
    - public: Illumina Hi-Seq 2000, PE, 50bp inserts
    - mine: Nextseq500, PE, 75bp inserts, HO
    - mine, second round of sequencing occurring now: Nextseq500, PE, 150bp inserts, HO

    The Problem:
    I've come across someone else's (Lisa Cohen, github - really cool project) usage of the publicly available data, using Trinity and then the same quality control assessment that I had run - BUSCO (looks for single copy genes via hmmer libraries, successor of CEGMA). So I have a direct comparison point between the BUSCO score of my CLC Bio assemblies vs. her Trinity assemblies using the same RNA seq libraries. Hers are better across the board for single copy hits. Some transcriptomes only by 2 genes, but in one or two transcriptomes the difference is 50 single copy genes out of the 450 tested.

    The questions:
    - what is the general knowledge/feeling about CLC Bio and Trinity? Preferences or horror stories?
    - is either of the assemblers known for making mistakes?
    - more directly, is either of them partial to misassembly of paralogs - if one gives me more single copy genes, is that a 'true' result or are they actually a mash up of paralogs?

    Thanks, y'all!
    Last edited by nurgling; 04-08-2017, 12:07 PM.

  • #2
    There is a difference

    Hi
    Yes, there is a difference in the quality/completeness of the assembled transcriptomes (Cegma and BUSCO). I would suggest to use Trinity and then follow you pipeline with/without CLC.
    Cheers

    Comment


    • #3
      what is the general knowledge/feeling about CLC Bio and Trinity
      CLC Bio: a black box, costs lots of money, can't be changed/modified without Qiagen's approval

      Trinity: over 1000 citations, free and open source, a prescriptive published protocol for de-novo assembly and DE analysis. I hacked the code a little to get it to work on my desktop computer.

      is either of the assemblers known for making mistakes?
      All assemblers make mistakes. Ignoring algorithmic errors (which are potentially fixable), it's impossible to resolve repeats that are longer than the template length (and/or with a repeat unit that is longer than the read length). Sequencers make mistakes which the assemblers can propagate. Transposable elements mess up assemblies if they occur at multiple points throughout the genome. Assembly of single cells will be incomplete. Assembly of pooled multiple cells (or organism populations) will have cell-specific variation. Transcriptome assemblies based on poly-A selected transcripts will be incomplete. Transcriptome assemblies will be incomplete for varying levels of incompleteness based on what genes are activated at the time of sampling.

      more directly, is either of them partial to misassembly of paralogs - if one gives me more single copy genes, is that a 'true' result or are they actually a mash up of paralogs?
      While it might be possible to resolve paralogs if they have different expression levels (which are consistent throughout the transcript). You need to do a genome-guided assembly to have any hope of properly assembling paralogs with shared sequence.

      Comment


      • #4
        Trinity is the standard for de novo transcriptome assemblies. Thus also the artifacts it produces are relatively wellk nown.
        Sorry, I have never used CLC for this purpose. I would suggest to contact CLC for suggested settings for transcriptomes (I can't imagine the defaults are optimal).
        For genome assemblies CLC has the advantage that it will work with all kinds of data (all kinds of read lengths, paired or not paired, and even low quality data). In short it is extremely robust for this purpose.

        Comment


        • #5
          I contacted QIAGEN support last year about this topic. CLC Genomics Workbench has no specific algorithm for assembling RNA-seq data. The support officer explained:

          The CLC de novo assembly tool was designed with genomic data in mind. At the moment we have no tool that is specific to transcriptomic data assembly. This means that there is no step or action that explicitly handles cases of alternative splicings.
          Also, CLC Genomics Workbench ignores RNA-seq strandedness.

          You cannot utilize the strand-specific information in the RNA-seq data for the de novo assembly*job. So, it does not matter if you have unstranded data.
          You'd be silly to choose CLC Genomics Workbench instead of Trinity for transcript assembly. CLC Genomics Workbench is so behind the times it can't even export sorted and indexed BAM files to disk.

          BAM format files exported from the Workbench are not sorted nor indexed. If pairs are not on the same contig, the mates will be exported as single reads.

          Comment


          • #6
            Reply to Dario1984

            Dear Dario,

            Sorry for not posting a response. My phone selectively doesn't submit things, and responding to you was one of those.

            Thanks you! This is exactly what I was looking for and was what I needed to convince my boss to switch away from CLC Bio.

            Champion.

            Comment

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