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  • mikyi
    Junior Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 2

    MarkDuplicate, coverage

    Hi,

    I am using MarkDuplicate.jar of Picard tools to remove duplicate reads. Then I convert bam file to pileup file to extract coverage for each residue. In the middle of that, I have two kinds of bam, bam before MarkDuplicate.jar and bam after MarkDuplicate.jar. I generate pileup file for each bam file by using samtool's pileup. Then I get the coverage for each residue from pileup file. The coverage value is different between bam before MarkDuplicate.jar and bam after MarkDuplicate.jar? I want to use coverage value for CNV analysis, so it is very critical for my analysis. Could you let me know if someone has the same kind of work. Thank you.
  • Heisman
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 534

    #2
    Maybe I'm misunderstanding, but if you remove duplicates you would expect to see less coverage. You should definitely use the coverage values after removing duplicates (your second bam file).

    Comment

    • Calle
      Junior Member
      • Feb 2009
      • 5

      #3
      No question is asked here really but I gather you are interested in knowing whether you should keep working with the duplicated removed or not for your CNV analysis.

      The answer to such a question would be dependent on, among other things, your depth of sequencing, your samples (single individuals or pools) and your sequencing strategy (i.e paired reads or fragments).

      A really high depth (for example 10000x) would give loads of duplicate reads even if PCR-duplicates were not present, especially if you are sequencing fragments but also paired reads if mean depth is sufficiently high and your insert size distribution is not tight.

      At insane mean depths (for example from enrichment studies) this will lead to all or close to all reads being treated as duplicates, which means you will only count each read once, which ultimately will mean that you have no chance of differentiating a CNV from normal sequence.

      Thus, I would be careful about just assuming dip-removal to be good for all kinds of analyses.

      Comment

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