Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • [general question]gatk, dindel, IGV

    Hi all!
    I'm newbie to analyzing NGS data and I'm not a biologist.

    I'm very confused, and I have some question and hope that you can give me simple answer:

    1th
    Dindel is the GATK algorithm for indel calling ? If not, what do GATK use for indel calling and what is GATK algorithm for indel calling ?

    2th:
    IGV is a genomic viewer, that can show how shortreads alignment to reference genome, e.g.:


    IGV use samtools to do counting, and other analysis on NGS data ?
    if not: are samtools and IGV two tool indipendent ?

    Sorry for my silly question...

  • #2
    1: Dindel is a standalone software to call indels: http://www.sanger.ac.uk/resources/software/dindel/. GATK uses UnifiedGenotyper to call indels (as well as SNPs).

    2:IGV does not use Samtools afaik. You need to specify 'other analysis'. If you are here you should know at least what analysis you need to do.

    Comment


    • #3
      Yeah, you're confused alright, but we're here to help ;-)

      1) Dindel and GATK are separate things -- As far as I know Dindel is a single tool focused on calling indels, whereas GATK is a toolbox with many tools including some that do indel calling.

      You can find details on GATK tools here: http://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/

      In a nutshell, GATK has two separate tools to call indels: UnifiedGenotyper and HaplotypeCaller. HaplotypeCaller is newer and more sensitive for indels than UnifiedGenotyper. Eventually it will replace UG completely.

      2) IGV is mainly a genome viewer. IGV is developed at the same place as GATK (Broad Institute) so they work well together. I work in the group that develops GATK, and we use IGV all the time to look at the sequence data we work with.

      Samtools is a different toolbox, developed elsewhere. It includes many useful tools, some of which we use to complement the GATK. It also includes a variant caller called mpileup. The alogrithms used by mpileup and by GATK's UnifiedGenotyper are similar because Heng Li, the author of mpileup, helped with the original design of the UGs algorithm, if I remember correctly.

      Since you are new to NGS analysis, I recommend you watch the introduction videos we provide here:



      I hope that will help you understand better.

      If you decide to work with GATK, feel free to ask questions in our support forum here:



      Good luck!

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by bruce01 View Post
        1: Dindel is a standalone software to call indels: http://www.sanger.ac.uk/resources/software/dindel/. GATK uses UnifiedGenotyper to call indels (as well as SNPs).

        2:IGV does not use Samtools afaik. You need to specify 'other analysis'. If you are here you should know at least what analysis you need to do.
        for other analysis I mean always indel calling.
        Do IGV do indel calling ?


        About GATK why is it possible to use DINDEL with -glm option ?

        thanks for help!

        Comment


        • #5
          No, IGV does not do indel calling.

          It is no longer possible to use -glm DINDEL with newer versions of GATK. Much older versions did have that mode because the original indel calling model was inspired by the standalone tool DINDEL. But now the model is completely different.

          You should really use the latest version of GATK in order to get quality results for indel calling.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by vdauwera View Post
            Yeah, you're confused alright, but we're here to help ;-)

            1) Dindel and GATK are separate things -- As far as I know Dindel is a single tool focused on calling indels, whereas GATK is a toolbox with many tools including some that do indel calling.

            You can find details on GATK tools here: http://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/

            In a nutshell, GATK has two separate tools to call indels: UnifiedGenotyper and HaplotypeCaller. HaplotypeCaller is newer and more sensitive for indels than UnifiedGenotyper. Eventually it will replace UG completely.

            2) IGV is mainly a genome viewer. IGV is developed at the same place as GATK (Broad Institute) so they work well together. I work in the group that develops GATK, and we use IGV all the time to look at the sequence data we work with.

            Samtools is a different toolbox, developed elsewhere. It includes many useful tools, some of which we use to complement the GATK. It also includes a variant caller called mpileup. The alogrithms used by mpileup and by GATK's UnifiedGenotyper are similar because Heng Li, the author of mpileup, helped with the original design of the UGs algorithm, if I remember correctly.

            Since you are new to NGS analysis, I recommend you watch the introduction videos we provide here:



            I hope that will help you understand better.

            If you decide to work with GATK, feel free to ask questions in our support forum here:



            Good luck!
            thank you very very much, I'm confused less!

            I actually use IGV to see alignment of my BAM file to reference genome hg19.
            To indel calling, I visualize manually each entire chromosome.

            I'm finding a way in IGV to find the indel position for entire my bam file and for all chromosome not manually. Is it possible in IGV or is it necessary to use tool as: gatk, samtools ?

            Last question: what's the role of igvtools ?

            Comment


            • #7
              thank you very very much, I'm confused less!

              I actually use IGV to see alignment of my BAM file to reference genome hg19.
              To indel calling, I visualize manually each entire chromosome.

              I'm finding a way in IGV to find the indel position for entire my bam file and for all chromosome not manually. Is it possible in IGV or is it necessary to use tool as: gatk, samtools ?

              Last question: what's the role of igvtools ?

              Comment


              • #8
                I strongly suggest you use a dedicated indel calling tool rather than try to identify indels manually. As far as I know GATK's HaplotypeCaller gives the best results for indels, but others may have different opinions (since I work on GATK, I may be biased).

                IGVtools are utilities that can convert some formats or count some basic statistics on your dataset. They are useful for these tasks but are not a replacement for variant calling tools.

                Comment


                • #9
                  ok! I understand.

                  in your opinion, in case of pooled samples, which tools are the best ?
                  I'm finding an article with compared to evaluate this.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    HaplotypeCaller cannot handle pooled samples yet, so for now you should use UnifiedGenotyper.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      just some questions :
                      dindel is only for indel or also for snp ?

                      is there a reference/publication that compare different snp calling algorithms ?
                      Last edited by sirmark; 03-13-2013, 07:34 AM.

                      Comment

                      Latest Articles

                      Collapse

                      • seqadmin
                        Advancing Precision Medicine for Rare Diseases in Children
                        by seqadmin




                        Many organizations study rare diseases, but few have a mission as impactful as Rady Children’s Institute for Genomic Medicine (RCIGM). “We are all about changing outcomes for children,” explained Dr. Stephen Kingsmore, President and CEO of the group. The institute’s initial goal was to provide rapid diagnoses for critically ill children and shorten their diagnostic odyssey, a term used to describe the long and arduous process it takes patients to obtain an accurate...
                        12-16-2024, 07:57 AM
                      • seqadmin
                        Recent Advances in Sequencing Technologies
                        by seqadmin



                        Innovations in next-generation sequencing technologies and techniques are driving more precise and comprehensive exploration of complex biological systems. Current advancements include improved accessibility for long-read sequencing and significant progress in single-cell and 3D genomics. This article explores some of the most impactful developments in the field over the past year.

                        Long-Read Sequencing
                        Long-read sequencing has seen remarkable advancements,...
                        12-02-2024, 01:49 PM

                      ad_right_rmr

                      Collapse

                      News

                      Collapse

                      Topics Statistics Last Post
                      Started by seqadmin, 12-17-2024, 10:28 AM
                      0 responses
                      24 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Started by seqadmin, 12-13-2024, 08:24 AM
                      0 responses
                      42 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Started by seqadmin, 12-12-2024, 07:41 AM
                      0 responses
                      28 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Started by seqadmin, 12-11-2024, 07:45 AM
                      0 responses
                      42 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Working...
                      X