Genotype
For finding sample matches and mismatches.
Compares each sample against each other to verify expected sample matches and identify any unexpected matches or mismatches. Running these comparisons requires the extracted pileup information to compute a discordance score between each pair of samples. The documentation below details the different ways to run this analysis, the output, and the methods behind them.
How to run the tool
You need one or more samples to run this analysis. However, if you supply just one sample then it is assumed you have samples already in the database to compare with. There are two required inputs: (1) the names of the sample(s) you want to compare (referred to as input samples
below), and (2) the database (biometrics will automatically load all sample data from the database). Moreover, there are two types of comparisons that are performed when running the tool:
(1) Compares your input samples with each other
This only runs if you supplied two or more input samples. There are three ways you can provide the input to the --input
flag:
Method 1
You can provide the sample names. This assumes there is a file named {sample_name}.pk
in the database directory.
Method 2
You can directly provide it the python pickle file that was outputted from the extract
tool.
Method 3
You can also indicate your input samples via a CSV file, which has the same format as what you provided to the extraction tool, but you only need the sample_name
column:
(2) Compares your input samples with remaining database samples
The second analysis will compare each of your input samples with all remaining samples in the database. However, if you wish to disable this step and not do the comparison then you can supply the --no-db-compare
flag:
Output
All analyses output a CSV file containing the metrics from comparing each sample. An interactive heatmap can also optionally be produced by supplying the --plot
flag. These outputs are saved either to the current working directory or to a folder you specify via --outdir
.
It also automatically outputs two sets of clustering results: (1) the first set just clusters your input samples, and (2) the second set clusters your input samples and samples in the database. Please see the cluster documentation to understand the output files.
CSV files
genotype_comparison.csv
Contains metrics for each pair of samples compared (one on each line). The table below provides a description on each column.
Column Name
Description
ReferenceSample
First sample in the comparison.
ReferenceSampleGroup
Group for the first sample in the comparison.
QuerySample
Second sample in the comparison.
QuerySampleGroup
Group for the second sample in the comparison.
CountOfCommonSites
Count of common SNP sites with enough coverage.
HomozygousInRef
Number of homozygous sites in the ReferenceSample.
TotalMatch
Total sites that match (homozygous and heterozygous).
HomozygousMatch
Number of homozygous sites that match.
HeterozygousMatch
Number of heterozygous sites that match.
HomozygousMismatch
Number of mismatching homozygous sites.
HeterozygousMismatch
Number of mismatching heterozygous sites.
DiscordanceRate
Discordance rate metric.
Matched
True if ReferenceSample and QuerySample have DiscordanceRate less than the threshold (default 0.05).
ExpectedMatch
True if the sample pair is expected to match.
Status
Takes one of the following: Expected Match, Unexpected Match, Unexpected Mismatch, or Expected Mismatch.
Interactive plot
Below are the two figures that are outputted from the two types of comparisons that are done. Samples that are unexpected matches or mismatches will be marked with a red star in the heatmap.
Algorithm details
Any samples with a discordance rate of 5% or higher are considered mismatches.
If there are <10 common homozygous sites, the discordance rate can not be calculated since this is a strong indication that coverage is too low and the samples failed other QC.
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