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  • Determine paired end overlapping

    I have a paired end Illumina exome data set that might have overlapped at the ends. My fragment size has 105 bp. I aligned my samples with bwa and generated my bam files with samtools.
    My question is:

    Is there any way to determine how many reads overlapped?

    How can I determine the distance between the paired ends (in case they didn´t overlap) or how much they overlapped?

    If this percentage is high, I am thinking about reanalyzing my data generating fragments of 75 or 50bp. Do you think that’s correct? Which percentage could be the cut-off to consider it high?

    Thanks
    Last edited by chariko; 04-13-2011, 08:29 AM.

  • #2
    in the SAM/BAM the TLEN column will tell you the template length. if it is smaller than 2*105bp you have overlapping ends (if there are no indels).

    try this to see the template length distribution of the first million reads: samtools view PEalignment.bam | head -n 1000000 | cut -f 9 | sort -n | uniq -c

    why would you want to generate fragments?

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by volks View Post
      in the SAM/BAM the TLEN column will tell you the template length. if it is smaller than 2*105bp you have overlapping ends (if there are no indels).

      try this to see the template length distribution of the first million reads: samtools view PEalignment.bam | head -n 1000000 | cut -f 9 | sort -n | uniq -c

      why would you want to generate fragments?
      Thanks for your answer, with the TLEN column I could manage it.

      Regarding your question, the problem of having too much overlap is that I will miss the advantages of an paired end experiment that is detection of structural variants in the genome between the pairs for example. So if I generated 75 bases fragments I would have less overlapping. I know it's better if you work with longer reads but I thought this could be a solution. Also I think there are softwares that can get this info even if pairs overlap but I don´t know yet which of them. Do you have an idea?
      Last edited by chariko; 04-28-2011, 11:57 PM.

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