Multi-sample de novo assembly and variant calling using Linked de bruijn graphs.
Variant calling with and without a reference genome. Between closely related
samples or highly diverged ones. From bacterial to mammalian genomes. Minimal
configuration. And it’s free.
Isaac Turner’s rewrite of cortex_var, to handle larger populations
with better genome assembly, as a set of modular commands. PhD supervisor: Prof Gil McVean. Collaborators: Zam Iqbal, Kiran Garimella. Based at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford.
27 May 2018
Branch
Status
master:
develop:
code analysis:
Build
McCortex compiles with clang and gcc. Tested on Mac OS X and linux. Requires zlib.
Download with:
sudo apt install liblzma-dev libbz2-dev
sudo apt install r-base-core # if you want to plot with R
To compile for a maximum kmer size of 31:
make all
to compile for a maximum kmer size of 63:
make MAXK=63 all
Executables appear in the bin/ directory.
Quickstart: Variant calling
Download and compile McCortex. Can be in any directory, later I’ll assume it’s in ~/mccortex/:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/mcveanlab/mccortex
cd mccortex
make all MAXK=31
make all MAXK=63
Now write a file detailing your samples and their data. Columns are separated by one or more spaces/tabs. File entries are separated by commas. Paired-end read files are separated by a colon ‘:’. File paths can be relative to the current directory or absolute. Most fileformats are supported:
Create a job file from your sample file (samples.txt). All output will go into the directory we specify (mc_calls). We also specify the kmer(s) to use. We’ll run at k=31 and k=61 and merge the results.
If your samples are human, you have a mix of haploid and diploid chromosomes. Therefore you need to specify which samples have only one copy of chrX and one of chrY. The format is -P <sample>:<chr>:<ploidy> where <sample> and <chr> can be comma-separated lists. Ploidy arguments are read in order.
how much memory to use MEM= (2GB for ten E. coli, 70GB for a human)
number of threads to use NTHREADS=
Run the job file:
make -f job.k31.k61.mk CTXDIR=~/mccortex MEM=70GB NTHREADS=8 \
JOINT_CALLING=yes USE_LINKS=no brk-geno-vcf
For a human genome, running time will be about 8 hours for a single sample and use about 70GB RAM. For small numbers of similar samples, peak memory usage will remain the same as a single sample, and should increase roughly logarithmically with the number of samples.
Job finished? Your results are in: mc_calls/vcfs/breakpoints.joint.plain.k31.k61.geno.vcf.gz.
Something go wrong? Take a look at the log file of the last command that ran. You may need to increase memory or compile for a different MAXK= value. Once you’ve fixed the issue, just rerun the make -f job... command. Add --dry-run to the make command to see which commands are going to be run without running them.
De novo genotyping: once de Bruijn graphs have been constructed, they can be used to genotype existing call sets (VCF+ref) without using mapped reads. See the wiki.
Commands
usage: mccortex31 <command> [options] <args>
version: ctx=XXXX zlib=1.2.5 htslib=1.2.1 ASSERTS=ON hash=Lookup3 CHECKS=ON k=3..31
Commands: breakpoints use a trusted assembled genome to call large events
bubbles find bubbles in graph which are potential variants
build construct cortex graph from FASTA/FASTQ/BAM
calls2vcf convert bubble/breakpoint calls to VCF
check load and check graph (.ctx) and path (.ctp) files
clean clean errors from a graph
contigs assemble contigs for a sample
correct error correct reads
coverage print contig coverage
dist make colour kmer distance matrix
index index a sorted cortex graph file
inferedges infer graph edges between kmers before calling `thread`
join combine graphs, filter graph intersections
links clean and plot link files (.ctp)
pjoin merge link files (.ctp)
popbubbles pop bubbles in the population graph
pview text view of a cortex link file (.ctp)
reads filter reads against a graph
rmsubstr reduce set of strings to remove substrings
server interactively query the graph
sort sort the kmers in a graph file
subgraph filter a subgraph using seed kmers
thread thread reads through cleaned graph to make links
uniqkmers generate random unique kmers
unitigs pull out unitigs in FASTA, DOT or GFA format
vcfcov coverage of a VCF against cortex graphs
vcfgeno genotype a VCF after running vcfcov
view text view of a cortex graph file (.ctx)
Type a command with no arguments to see help.
Common Options:
-h, --help Help message
-q, --quiet Silence status output normally printed to STDERR
-f, --force Overwrite output files if they already exist
-m, --memory <M> Memory e.g. 1GB [default: 1GB]
-n, --nkmers <H> Hash entries [default: 4M, ~4 million]
-t, --threads <T> Limit on proccessing threads [default: 2]
-o, --out <file> Output file
-p, --paths <in.ctp> Assembly file to load (can specify multiple times)
Getting Helps
Type a command with no arguments to see usage. The following may also be useful:
Issues can be submitted on github. Pull requests welcome. Please add your name
to the AUTHORS file. Code should compile on mac/linux with clang/gcc without errors or warnings.
Unit tests are run with make test and integration tests with cd tests; ./run. Both of these test suites are run automatically with Travis CI when commits are pushed to GitHub.
Occasionally we also run Coverity Scan. This is done by pushing to the coverity_scan branch on github, which triggers Travis CI to upload the latest code to Coverity.
De novo assembly and genotyping of variants using colored de Bruijn graphs,
Iqbal(), Caccamo(), Turner, Flicek, McVean (Nature Genetics) (2012)
(doi:10.1038/ng.1028) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3272472
High-throughput microbial population genomics using the Cortex variation assembler,
Iqbal, Turner, McVean (Bioinformatics) (Nov 2012)
(doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/bts673) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23172865
McCortex: Population De Novo Assembly and Variant Calling
Multi-sample de novo assembly and variant calling using Linked de bruijn graphs. Variant calling with and without a reference genome. Between closely related samples or highly diverged ones. From bacterial to mammalian genomes. Minimal configuration. And it’s free.
Isaac Turner’s rewrite of cortex_var, to handle larger populations with better genome assembly, as a set of modular commands. PhD supervisor: Prof Gil McVean. Collaborators: Zam Iqbal, Kiran Garimella. Based at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford.
27 May 2018
Build
McCortex compiles with clang and gcc. Tested on Mac OS X and linux. Requires zlib. Download with:
Install dependencies (for htslib) on mac:
Or on linux:
To compile for a maximum kmer size of 31:
to compile for a maximum kmer size of 63:
Executables appear in the
bin/directory.Quickstart: Variant calling
Download and compile McCortex. Can be in any directory, later I’ll assume it’s in
~/mccortex/:Now write a file detailing your samples and their data. Columns are separated by one or more spaces/tabs. File entries are separated by commas. Paired-end read files are separated by a colon ‘:’. File paths can be relative to the current directory or absolute. Most fileformats are supported:
Create a job file from your sample file (
samples.txt). All output will go into the directory we specify (mc_calls). We also specify the kmer(s) to use. We’ll run atk=31andk=61and merge the results.If your data are haploid, we set
--ploidy 1:If your samples are human, you have a mix of haploid and diploid chromosomes. Therefore you need to specify which samples have only one copy of
chrXand one ofchrY. The format is-P <sample>:<chr>:<ploidy>where<sample>and<chr>can be comma-separated lists. Ploidy arguments are read in order.Now you’re ready to run. You’ll need to pass:
CTXDIR=MEM=(2GB for ten E. coli, 70GB for a human)NTHREADS=Run the job file:
For a human genome, running time will be about 8 hours for a single sample and use about 70GB RAM. For small numbers of similar samples, peak memory usage will remain the same as a single sample, and should increase roughly logarithmically with the number of samples.
Job finished? Your results are in:
mc_calls/vcfs/breakpoints.joint.plain.k31.k61.geno.vcf.gz.Something go wrong? Take a look at the log file of the last command that ran. You may need to increase memory or compile for a different
MAXK=value. Once you’ve fixed the issue, just rerun themake -f job...command. Add--dry-runto themakecommand to see which commands are going to be run without running them.De novo genotyping: once de Bruijn graphs have been constructed, they can be used to genotype existing call sets (VCF+ref) without using mapped reads. See the wiki.
Commands
Getting Helps
Type a command with no arguments to see usage. The following may also be useful:
Code And Contributing
Issues can be submitted on github. Pull requests welcome. Please add your name to the AUTHORS file. Code should compile on mac/linux with clang/gcc without errors or warnings.
More on the wiki
Unit tests are run with
make testand integration tests withcd tests; ./run. Both of these test suites are run automatically with Travis CI when commits are pushed to GitHub.Static analysis can be run with cppcheck:
or with clang:
Occasionally we also run Coverity Scan. This is done by pushing to the
coverity_scanbranch on github, which triggers Travis CI to upload the latest code to Coverity.License: MIT
Bundled libraries may have different licenses:
Used in testing:
Citing
If you find McCortex useful, please cite our paper:
Other Cortex papers: