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  • Copy number normalization in capture experiments?

    Hello,

    I'm trying to calculate rough copy number changes from our targeted (and generally deep) sequence of 3700 exons. However, I have a pretty substantial GC bias issue occurring in some of my samples. So far, I've just done rough bin normalization rather than a loess normalization. It seems that I can bring my data into the correct range, but that there's still a variance issue. I like what is suggested for corrections in the CNAnorm publication, but I feel unsure of how well it would work for such deep coverage localized to so few locations. Does anyone have any suggestions or thoughts?

    Thanks,
    anjulka

  • #2
    I have had numerous conversations with the author, he states that although it was designed for low coverage, he has been running it on 30X with no issues. I can back this statement up and say the same. It does work but its a bit trickier, try to set the window size appropriately

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    • #3
      Hi.

      I am pleased to see that CNAnorm is considered also outside the task it was designed for.
      We are using CNAnorm for high coverage data and we do have a couple of capture experiments we'll be looking into.

      Here some thoughts and observation that might help you.

      - The most important aspect is to have the capture for a matched normal. It will partially balance the bias due to the capture.

      - The capture is affected by CG content and some region with very high or very low GC content are not captured at all.

      - Could be a good idea to "clean" your bam files so that reads are only from the expected target regions. You will get rid of all the windows with few off-target reads that would add noise and possibly make GC correction less efficient.

      - looking at high coverage data, it seems there is some other bias on top of the GC content that we don't quite understand where it is coming from. It still seem somehow related to GC, but it is not linear (sometimes higher GC means more reads, sometimes fewer) It could be metilation, or something else... Anyway performing the GC correction decrease the noise.

      In general, I don't see why CNAnorm should not work with your data. As I was suggesting here maybe start with relatively large windows (--window 100000) when using bam2windows.pl, However we did not have a capture experiment in mind while designing it and there might be some unforeseen difficulty.

      Best of luck, and let me know
      Last edited by stefanoberri; 01-23-2012, 01:09 PM.

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