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  • Oases assembly merge times out on a cluster

    Hi,

    I have run velvet-oases on k-mers 21 thru 55, and I am trying to merge the assemblies now. I tried using the velveth --> velvetg --> oases approach from the "Assembly Merging" section of the manual, but velvetg runs for an abnormally long duration (>48 hours), and the cluster on which I'm running the script times out.

    I have tried providing 244 GB of RAM, but it makes no difference - the "Log" file from velveth is written to once when the script starts running, and no other file(including the redirected stderr/stdout) is touched for the entire duration of the run.

    Any idea how I could tackle this?

    --
    Thanks,
    Ram
    Ram

  • #2
    Small K-mer assemblies are pretty computationally heavy. How many reads are you working with? Have you done any quality filtering on your reads?

    If you are using a massive amount of reads, you may want to consider implementing some sort of digital normalization (Trinity can do this independent of assembly and Titus Brown has a version of digital normalization as well http://arxiv.org/abs/1203.4802).

    Reducing reads and reads with errors will greatly reduce memory and run time.

    Comment


    • #3
      Hi,

      Thank you so much for the response!

      I'm working with Titus Brown's version of digital normalization right now - that brought the reads down from around 289 mil to 12 mil (6X2) PE reads and 7 mil SE reads (after a strip-and-split ).

      I asked my sequencing provider - the only QC step was the pass filter run on raw reads. Is there a specific QC filter I can use for transcriptome reads?



      Originally posted by jgibbons1 View Post
      Small K-mer assemblies are pretty computationally heavy. How many reads are you working with? Have you done any quality filtering on your reads?

      If you are using a massive amount of reads, you may want to consider implementing some sort of digital normalization (Trinity can do this independent of assembly and Titus Brown has a version of digital normalization as well http://arxiv.org/abs/1203.4802).

      Reducing reads and reads with errors will greatly reduce memory and run time.
      Ram

      Comment


      • #4
        No problem.

        One thing you may want to try BEFORE digital normalization is trimming reads based on quality score. There are quite a few pieces of software that can do this (trimmomatic and trim galore to name a couple).

        Comment

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