SOAPdenovo-Trans: De novo transcriptome assembly with short RNA-Seq reads

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Abstract

Motivation: Transcriptome sequencing has long been the favored method for quickly and inexpensively obtaining a large number of gene sequences from an organism with no reference genome. Owing to the rapid increase in throughputs and decrease in costs of next- generation sequencing, RNA-Seq in particular has become the method of choice. However, the very short reads (e.g. 2 × 90 bp paired ends) from next generation sequencing makes de novo assembly to recover complete or full-length transcript sequences an algorithmic challenge. Results: Here, we present SOAPdenovo-Trans, a de novo transcriptome assembler designed specifically for RNA-Seq. We evaluated its performance on transcriptome datasets from rice and mouse. Using as our benchmarks the known transcripts from these well-annotated genomes (sequenced a decade ago), we assessed how SOAPdenovo-Trans and two other popular transcriptome assemblers handled such practical issues as alternative splicing and variable expression levels. Our conclusion is that SOAPdenovo-Trans provides higher contiguity, lower redundancy and faster execution. © 2014 The Author. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Xie, Y., Wu, G., Tang, J., Luo, R., Patterson, J., Liu, S., … Wang, J. (2014). SOAPdenovo-Trans: De novo transcriptome assembly with short RNA-Seq reads. Bioinformatics, 30(12), 1660–1666. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btu077

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