[HTML][HTML] BS Seeker: precise mapping for bisulfite sequencing

PY Chen, SJ Cokus, M Pellegrini - BMC bioinformatics, 2010 - Springer
BMC bioinformatics, 2010Springer
Background Bisulfite sequencing using next generation sequencers yields genome-wide
measurements of DNA methylation at single nucleotide resolution. Traditional aligners are
not designed for mapping bisulfite-treated reads, where the unmethylated Cs are converted
to Ts. We have developed BS Seeker, an approach that converts the genome to a three-
letter alphabet and uses Bowtie to align bisulfite-treated reads to a reference genome. It
uses sequence tags to reduce mapping ambiguity. Post-processing of the alignments …
Background
Bisulfite sequencing using next generation sequencers yields genome-wide measurements of DNA methylation at single nucleotide resolution. Traditional aligners are not designed for mapping bisulfite-treated reads, where the unmethylated Cs are converted to Ts. We have developed BS Seeker, an approach that converts the genome to a three-letter alphabet and uses Bowtie to align bisulfite-treated reads to a reference genome. It uses sequence tags to reduce mapping ambiguity. Post-processing of the alignments removes non-unique and low-quality mappings.
Results
We tested our aligner on synthetic data, a bisulfite-converted Arabidopsis library, and human libraries generated from two different experimental protocols. We evaluated the performance of our approach and compared it to other bisulfite aligners. The results demonstrate that among the aligners tested, BS Seeker is more versatile and faster. When mapping to the human genome, BS Seeker generates alignments significantly faster than RMAP and BSMAP. Furthermore, BS Seeker is the only alignment tool that can explicitly account for tags which are generated by certain library construction protocols.
Conclusions
BS Seeker provides fast and accurate mapping of bisulfite-converted reads. It can work with BS reads generated from the two different experimental protocols, and is able to efficiently map reads to large mammalian genomes. The Python program is freely available at http://pellegrini.mcdb.ucla.edu/BS_Seeker/BS_Seeker.html .
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