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January 25, 2015

Corresponding authors:
Deanna M Church       deanna.church@personalis.com

Valerie A Schneider    schneiva@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Richard Durbin           rd@sanger.ac.uk
Paul Flicek               flicek@ebi.ac.uk

Genome Biology 2015, 16:13  doi:10.1186/s13059-015-0587-3

Background
One of the flagship products of the Human Genome Project (HGP) was a high-quality human reference assembly [1]. This assembly, coupled with advances in low-cost, high-throughput sequencing, has allowed us to address previously inaccessible questions about population diversity, genome structure, gene expression and regulation [2]-[5]. It has become clear, however, that the original models used to represent the reference assembly inadequately represent our current understanding of genome architecture.

The first assembly models were designed for simple ‘linear’ genome sequences, with little sequence variation and even less structural diversity. The design fit the understanding of human variation at the time the HGP began [6]. The HGP constructed the reference assembly by collapsing sequences from over 50 individuals into a single consensus haplotype representation of each chromosome. Employing a clone-based approach, the sequence of each clone represented a single haplotype from a given donor. At clone boundaries, however, haplotypes could switch abruptly, creating a mosaic structure. This design introduced errors within regions of complex structural variation, when sequences unique to one haplotype prevented construction of clone overlaps. The assembly therefore inadvertently included multiple haplotypes in series in some regions [7]-[9].

The Genome Reference Consortium (GRC) began stewardship of the reference assembly in 2007. The GRC proposed a new assembly model that formalized the inclusion of ‘alternative sequence paths’ in regions with complex structural variation, and then released GRCh37 using this new model [10]. The release of GRCh37 also marked the deposition of the human reference assembly to an International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC) database, providing stable, trackable sequence identifiers, in the form of accession and version numbers, for all sequences in the assembly. The GRC developed an assembly model that was incorporated into the National Centre for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) and European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) assembly database that provides a stable identifier for the collection of sequences and the relationship between these sequences that comprise an assembly [11]. Subsequent minor assembly releases added a number of ‘fix patches’ that could be used to resolve mistakes in the reference sequence, as well as ‘novel patches’ that are new alternative sequence representations [10].

The new assembly model presents significant advances to the genomics community, but, to realize those advances, we must address many technical challenges. The new assembly model is neither haploid nor diploid - instead, it includes additional scaffold sequences, aligned to the chromosome assembly, that provide alternative sequence representations for regions of excess diversity. Widely used alignment programs, variant discovery and analysis tools, as well as most reporting formats, expect reads and features to have a single location in the reference assembly as they were developed using a haploid assembly model. Many alignment and analysis tools penalize reads that align to more than one location under the assumption that the location of these reads cannot be resolved owing to paralogous sequences in the genome. These tools do not distinguish allelic duplication, added by the alternative loci, from paralogous duplication found in the genome, thus confounding repeat and mappability calculations, paired-end placements and downstream interpretation of alignments in regions with alternative loci.

To determine the efforts needed to facilitate use of the full assembly, the GRC organized a workshop in conjunction with the 2014 Genome Informatics meeting in Cambridge, UK (http://www.slideshare.net/GenomeRef webcite). Participants identified challenges presented by the new assembly model and discussed ways forward that we describe here.

Towards the graph of human variation
A graph structure is a natural way to represent a population-based genome assembly, with branches in the graph representing all variation found within the source sequences. Most assembly programs internally use a graph representation to build the assembly, but ultimately produce a flattened structure for use by downstream tools [12]-[14]. Recently, formal proposals for representing a population-based reference graph have been described [15]-[17]. The newly formed Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) is leading an effort to formalize data structures for graph-based reference assemblies, but it will likely take years to develop the infrastructure and analysis tools needed to support these new structures and see their widespread adoption across the biological and clinical research communities [18].

The introduction of alternative loci into the assembly model provides a stepping-stone towards a full graph-based representation of a population-based reference genome. The alternative loci provided by the GRC are based on high-quality, finished sequence. Although it is not feasible to represent all known variation using the alternative locus scheme, this model does allow us to better represent regions with extreme levels of diversity. Alternative loci are not meant to represent all variation within a population, but rather provide an immediate solution for adding sequences missing from the chromosome assembly. In practice, alternative locus addition is limited by the availability of high-quality genomic sequence, and the GRC has focused on representing sequence at the most diverse regions, such as the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). The representation of all population variation is better suited to a graph-based representation. The high quality of the sequence at these locations provides robust data to test graph implementations. Additionally, because both NCBI and Ensembl have annotated these sequences, we can also begin to address how to annotate graph structures at these complex loci.

While GRCh37 had only three regions containing nine alternative locus sequences, GRCh38 has 178 regions containing 261 alternative locus sequences, collectively representing 3.6 Mbp of novel sequence and over 150 genes not represented in the primary assembly (Table 1). The increased level of alternative sequence representation intensifies the urgency to develop new analysis methods to support inclusion of these sequences. Inclusion of all sequences in the reference assembly allows us to better analyze these regions with potentially modest updates to currently used tools and reporting structures. Although the addition of the alternative loci to current analysis pipelines might lead to only modest gains in analysis power on a genome-wide scale, some loci will see considerable improvement owing to the addition of significant amounts of sequence that cannot be represented accurately in the chromosome assembly (Figure 1).

Omission of the novel sequence contained in the alternative loci can lead to off-target sequence alignments, and thus incorrect variant calls or other errors, when a sample containing the alternative allele is sequenced and aligned to only the primary assembly. Using reads simulated from the unique portion of the alternative loci, we found that approximately 75% of the reads had an off-target alignment when aligned to the primary assembly alone. This finding was consistent using different alignment methods [10]. The 1000 Genomes Project also observed the detrimental effect of missing sequences and developed a ‘decoy’ sequence dataset in an effort to minimize off-target alignments [19],[20]. Much of this decoy has now been incorporated into GRCh38, and analysis of reads taken from 1000 Genomes samples that previously mapped only to the decoy shows that approximately 70% of these now align to the full GRCh38, with approximately 1% of these reads aligning only to the alternative loci (Figure 2).

We foresee many computational approaches that allow the inclusion of all assembly sequences in analysis pipelines. To better support exploration in this area, we propose some improvements to standard practices and data structures that will facilitate future development.

Enhancement of standard reporting formats (such as BAM/CRAM, VCF/BCF, GFF3) so that they can accommodate features with multiple locations. Doing so while maintaining the allelic relationship between these features is crucial [21]-[24].

Adoption of standard sequence identifiers for sequence analysis and reporting. Using shorthand identifiers (for example, ‘chr1’ or ‘1’) to indicate the sequence is imprecise and also ignores the presence of other sequences in the assembly. In many cases, other top-level sequences, such as unlocalized scaffolds, patches and alternative loci, have a chromosome assignment but not chromosome coordinates. These sequences are independent of the chromosome assembly coordinate system and have their own coordinate space. Alternative loci are related to the chromosome coordinates through alignment to the chromosome assembly. Developing a structure that treats all top-level sequences as first-class citizens during analysis is an important step towards adopting use of the full assembly in analysis pipelines.

Curation of multiple sequence alignments of the alternative loci to each other and the primary path. Currently, pairwise alignments of the alternative loci to the chromosome assembly are available to provide the allelic relationship between the alternative locus and the chromosome. However, these pairwise alignments do not allow for the comparison of alternative loci in a given region to each other. These alignments can also be used to develop graph structures. The relationship of the allelic sequences within a region helps define the assembly structure, and the community should work from a single set of alignments. These should be distributed with the GRC assembly releases.

Recently, the GRC has released a track hub [25] that allows for the distribution of GRC data using standard track names and content (http://ngs.sanger.ac.uk/production/grit/track_hub/hub.txt webcite). Additionally, the GRC has created a GitHub page to track development of tools and resources that facilitate use of the full assembly (https://github.com/GenomeRef/SoftwareDevTracking webcite).

Concluding remarks

As we gain understanding of biological systems, we must update the models we use to represent these data. This can be difficult when the model supports common infrastructure and analysis tools used by a large swath of the scientific community. However, this growth is crucial in order to move the scientific community forward. While adoption of this new model will take substantial effort, doing so is an important step for the human genetics and broader genomics communities. We now have an opportunity and imperative to revisit old assumptions and conventions to develop a more robust analysis framework. The use of all sequences included in the reference will allow for improved genomic analyses and understanding of genomic architecture. Additionally, this new assembly model allows us to take a small step towards the realization of a graph-based assembly representation. The evolution of the assembly model allows us to improve our understanding of genomic architecture and provides a framework for boosting our understanding of how this architecture impacts human development and disease.




The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://genomebiology.com/2015/16/1/13



image source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/genome/assembly/grc/human/

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