/VarDictJava

VarDict Java port

Primary LanguageJava

VarDictJava

Introduction

VarDictJava is a variant discovery program written in Java and Perl. It is a partial Java port of VarDict variant caller.

The original Perl VarDict is a sensitive variant caller for both single and paired sample variant calling from BAM files. VarDict implements several novel features such as amplicon bias aware variant calling from targeted sequencing experiments, rescue of long indels by realigning bwa soft clipped reads and better scalability than many other Java based variant callers. The Java port is around 10x faster than the original Perl implementation.

Please cite VarDict:

Lai Z, Markovets A, Ahdesmaki M, Chapman B, Hofmann O, McEwen R, Johnson J, Dougherty B, Barrett JC, and Dry JR. VarDict: a novel and versatile variant caller for next-generation sequencing in cancer research. Nucleic Acids Res. 2016, pii: gkw227.

The link to is article can be accessed through: http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/gkw227?ijkey=Tk8eKQcYwNlQRNU&keytype=ref

Original coded by Zhongwu Lai 2014.

VarDictJava can run in single sample (see Single sample mode section), paired sample (see Paired variant calling section), or amplicon bias aware modes. As input, VarDictJava takes reference genomes in FASTA format, aligned reads in BAM format, and target regions in BED format.

Requirements

  1. JDK 1.8 or later
  2. R language (uses /usr/bin/env R)
  3. Perl (uses /usr/bin/env perl)
  4. Internet connection to download dependencies using gradle.

Getting started

Getting source code

The VarDictJava source code is located at https://github.com/AstraZeneca-NGS/VarDictJava.

To load the project, execute the following command:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/AstraZeneca-NGS/VarDictJava.git

Note that the original VardDict project is placed in this repository as a submodule and its contents can be found in the sub-directory VarDict in VarDictJava working folder. So when you use teststrandbias.R and var2vcf_valid.pl. (see details and examples below), you have to add prefix VarDict: VarDict/teststrandbias.R and VarDict/var2vcf_valid.pl.

Compiling

The project uses Gradle and already includes a gradlew script.

To build the project, in the root folder of the project, run the following command:

./gradlew clean installApp 

To generate Javadoc, in the build/docs/javadoc folder, run the following command:

./gradlew clean javadoc

Single sample mode

To run VarDictJava in single sample mode, use a BAM file specified without the | symbol and perform Steps 3 and 4 (see the Program workflow section) using teststrandbias.R and var2vcf_valid.pl. The following is an example command to run in single sample mode:

AF_THR="0.01" # minimum allele frequency
<path_to_vardict_folder>/build/install/VarDict/bin/VarDict -G /path/to/hg19.fa -f $AF_THR -N sample_name -b /path/to/my.bam -z -c 1 -S 2 -E 3 -g 4 /path/to/my.bed | VarDict/teststrandbias.R | VarDict/var2vcf_valid.pl -N sample_name -E -f $AF_THR

VarDictJava can also be invoked without a BED file if the region is specified in the command line with -R option. The following is an example command to run VarDictJava for a region (chromosome 7, position from 55270300 to 55270348, EGFR gene) with -R option:

<path_to_vardict_folder>/build/install/VarDict/bin/VarDict  -G /path/to/hg19.fa -f 0.001 -N sample_name -b /path/to/sample.bam  -z -R  chr7:55270300-55270348:EGFR | VarDict/teststrandbias.R | VarDict/var2vcf_valid.pl -N sample_name -E -f 0.001 >vars.vcf

In single sample mode, output columns contain a description and statistical info for variants in the single sample. See section Output Columns for list of columns in the output.

Paired variant calling

To run paired variant calling, use BAM files specified as BAM1|BAM2 and perform Steps 3 and 4 (see the Program Workflow section) using testsomatic.R and var2vcf_paired.pl.

In this mode, the number of statistics columns in the output is doubled: one set of columns is for the first sample, the other - for second sample.

The following is an example command to run in paired mode:

AF_THR="0.01" # minimum allele frequency
<path_to_vardict_folder>/build/install/VarDict/bin/VarDict -G /path/to/hg19.fa -f $AF_THR -N tumor_sample_name -b "/path/to/tumor.bam|/path/to/normal.bam" -z -F -c 1 -S 2 -E 3 -g 4 /path/to/my.bed | VarDict/testsomatic.R | VarDict/var2vcf_paired.pl -N "tumor_sample_name|normal_sample_name" -f $AF_THR

Running Tests

Integration testing

The list of integration test cases is stored in files in testdata/intergationtestcases directory. To run all integration tests, the command is:

./gradlew test --tests com.astrazeneca.vardict.integrationtests.IntegrationTest 
User extension of testcases

Each file in testdata/intergationtestcases directory represents a test case with input data and expected output

1. Create a txt file in testdata/intergationtestcases folder.

The file contains testcase input (of format described in Test cases file format) in the first line and expected output in the remaining file part.

2. Extend or create thin-FASTA in testdata/fastas folder.

3. Run tests.

Test cases file format

Each input file represents one test case input description. In the input file the first line consists of the following fields separated by , symbol:

Required fields:

  • test case name
  • reference name
  • bam file name
  • chromosome name
  • start of region
  • end of region

Optional fields:

  • start of region with amplicon case
  • end of region with amplicon case

Parameters field:

  • the last filed can be any other command line parameters string

Example of first line of input file:

Amplicon,hg19.fa,Colo829-18_S3-sort.bam,chr1,933866,934466,933866,934466,-a 10:0.95 -D
Somatic,hg19.fa,Colo829-18_S3-sort.bam|Colo829-19_S4-sort.bam,chr1,755917,756517
Simple,hg19.fa,Colo829-18_S3-sort.bam,chr1,9922,10122,-p
Thin-FASTA Format

Thin fasta is needed to store only needed for tests regions of real references to decrease disk usage. Each thin-FASTA file is .csv file, each line of which represent part of reference data with information of:

  • chromosome name
  • start position of contig
  • end position of contig
  • and nucleotide sequence that corresponds to region

thin-FASTA example:

chr1,1,15,ATGCCCCCCCCCAAA
chr1,200,205,GCCGA
chr2,10,12,AC

Note: VarDict expands given regions by 700bp to left and right (plus given value by -x option).

Program Workflow

The VarDictJava program follows the workflow:

  1. Get regions of interest from a BED file or the command line.

  2. For each segment:

    1. Find all variants for this segment in mapped reads:
      1. Optionally skip duplicated reads, low mapping-quality reads, and reads having a large number of mismatches.
      2. Skip a read if it does not overlap with the segment.
      3. Preprocess the CIGAR string for each read.
      4. For each position, create a variant. If a variant is already present, adjust its count using the adjCnt function.
        1. Realign some of the variants using special ad-hoc approaches.
        2. Calculate statistics for the variant, filter out some bad ones, if any.
        3. Assign a type to each variant.
        4. Output variants in an intermediate internal format (tabular). Columns of the table are described in the Output Columns section.

    Note: To perform Steps 1 and 2, use Java VarDict.

  3. Perform a statistical test for strand bias using an R script.
    Note: Use R script for this step.

  4. Transform the intermediate tabular format to VCF. Output the variants with filtering and statistical data.
    Note: Use the Perl scripts var2vcf_valid.pl or var2vcf_paired.pl for this step.

Program Options

  • -H
    Print help page
  • -h
    Print a header row decribing columns
  • -i Output splicing read counts
  • -p
    Do pileup regarless the frequency
  • -C
    Indicate the chromosome names are just numbers, such as 1, 2, not chr1, chr2
  • -D
    Debug mode. Will print some error messages and append full genotype at the end.
  • -t
    Indicate to remove duplicated reads. Only one pair with identical start positions will be kept
  • -3
    Indicate to move indels to 3-prime if alternative alignment can be achieved.
  • -F bit
    The hexical to filter reads. Default: 0x500 (filter 2nd alignments and duplicates). Use -F 0 to turn it off.
  • -z 0/1
    Indicate whether the BED file contains zero-based cooridates, the same way as the Genome browser IGV does. -z 1 indicates that coordinates in a BED file start from 0. -z 0 indicates that the coordinates start from 1. Default: 1 for a BED file or amplicon BED file. Use 0 to turn it off. When using -R option, it is set to 0
  • -a int:float
    Indicate it is amplicon based calling. Reads that do not map to the amplicon will be skipped. A read pair is considered to belong to the amplicon if the edges are less than int bp to the amplicon, and overlap fraction is at least float. Default: 10:0.95
  • -k 0/1
    Indicate whether to perform local realignment. Default: 1 or yes. Set to 0 to disable it.
  • -G Genome fasta
    The reference fasta. Should be indexed (.fai). Defaults to: /ngs/reference_data/genomes/Hsapiens/hg19/seq/hg19.fa
  • -R Region
    The region of interest. In the format of chr:start-end. If chr is not start-end but start (end is omitted), then it is a single position. No BED is needed.
  • -d delimiter
    The delimiter for splitting region_info, defaults to tab "\t"
  • -n regular_expression
    The regular expression to extract sample names from bam filenames. Defaults to: /([^\/\._]+?)_[^\/]*.bam/
  • -N string
    The sample name to be used directly. Will overwrite -n option
  • -b string
    The indexed BAM file
  • -c INT
    The column for chromosome
  • -S INT
    The column for the region start, e.g. gene start
  • -E INT
    The column for the region end, e.g. gene end
  • -s INT
    The column for a segment starts in the region, e.g. exon starts
  • -e INT
    The column for a segment ends in the region, e.g. exon ends
  • -g INT
    The column for a gene name, or segment annotation
  • -x INT
    The number of nucleotides to extend for each segment, default: 0
  • -f double
    The threshold for allele frequency, default: 0.05 or 5%
  • -r minimum reads
    The minimum # of variance reads, default: 2
  • -B INT
    The minimum # of reads to determine strand bias, default: 2
  • -Q INT
    If set, reads with mapping quality less than INT will be filtered and ignored
  • -q INT
    The phred score for a base to be considered a good call. Default: 25 (for Illumina). For PGM, set it to ~15, as PGM tends to underestimate base quality.
  • -m INT
    If set, reads with mismatches more than INT will be filtered and ignored. Gaps are not counted as mismatches. Valid only for bowtie2/TopHat or BWA aln followed by sampe. BWA mem is calculated as NM - Indels. Default: 8, or reads with more than 8 mismatches will not be used.
  • -T INT
    Trim bases after [INT] bases in the reads
  • -X INT
    Extension of bp to look for mismatches after insersion or deletion. Default to 3 bp, or only calls when they're within 3 bp.
  • -P number
    The read position filter. If the mean variants position is less that specified, it is considered false positive. Default: 5
  • -Z double
    For downsampling fraction, e.g. 0.7 means roughly 70% downsampling. Default: No downsampling. Use with caution. The downsampling will be random and non-reproducible.
  • -o Qratio
    The Qratio of (good_quality_reads)/(bad_quality_reads+0.5). The quality is defined by -q option. Default: 1.5
  • -O MapQ
    The reads should have at least mean MapQ to be considered a valid variant. Default: no filtering
  • -V freq
    The lowest frequency in a normal sample allowed for a putative somatic mutations. Defaults to 0.05
  • -I INT
    The indel size. Default: 120bp
  • -M INT The minimum matches for a read to be considered. If, after soft-clipping, the matched bp is less than INT, then the read is discarded. It's meant for PCR based targeted sequencing where there's no insert and the matching is only the primers. Default: 0, or no filtering
  • -th [threads]
    If this parameter is missing, then the mode is one-thread. If you add the -th parameter, the number of threads equals to the number of processor cores. The parameter -th threads sets the number of threads explicitly.
  • -VS STRICT | LENIENT | SILENT How strict to be when reading a SAM or BAM. STRICT - throw an exception if something looks wrong. LENIENT - Emit warnings but keep going if possible. SILENT - Like LENIENT, only don't emit warning messages. Default: LENIENT

Output columns

  1. Sample - sample name
  2. Gene - gene name from a BED file
  3. Chr - chromosome name
  4. Start - start position of the variation
  5. End - end position of the variation
  6. Ref - reference sequence
  7. Alt - variant sequence
  8. Depth - total coverage
  9. AltDepth - variant coverage
  10. RefFwdReads - reference forward strand coverage
  11. RefRevReads - reference reverse strand coverage
  12. AltFwdReads - variant forward strand coverage
  13. AltRevReads - variant reverse strand coverage
  14. Genotype - genotype description string
  15. AF - allele frequency
  16. Bias - strand bias flag
  17. PMean - mean position in read
  18. PStd - flag for read position standard deviation
  19. QMean - mean base quality
  20. QStd - flag for base quality standard deviation
  21. QRATIO - ratio of high quality reads to low-quality reads
  22. HIFREQ - variant frequency for high-quality reads
  23. EXTRAFR - Adjusted AF for indels due to local realignment
  24. SHIFT3 - No. of bases to be shifted to 3 prime for deletions due to alternative alignment
  25. MSI - MicroSattelite. > 1 indicates MSI
  26. MSINT - MicroSattelite unit length in bp
  27. NM - average number of mismatches for reads containing the variant
  28. HICNT - number of high-quality reads with the variant
  29. HICOV - position coverage by high quality reads
  30. 5pFlankSeq - neighboring reference sequence to 5' end
  31. 3pFlankSeq - neighboring reference sequence to 3' end
  32. SEGMENT:CHR_START_END - position description
  33. VARTYPE - variant type

License

The code is freely available under the MIT license.

Contributors

Java port of VarDict implemented based on the original Perl version (Zhongwu Lai) by: