Genome-wide alignment-free phylogenetic distance estimation under a no strand-bias model

Author:

Balaban Metin1ORCID,Bristy Nishat Anjum2,Faisal Ahnaf2,Bayzid Md Shamsuzzoha2ORCID,Mirarab Siavash13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bioinformatics and System Biology Program, University of California San Diego , San Diego, CA 92093, USA

2. Computer Science and Engineering, Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology , Dhaka 1205, Bangladesh

3. Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California San Diego , San Diego, CA 92093, USA

Abstract

Abstract Summary: While alignment has been the dominant approach for determining homology prior to phylogenetic inference, alignment-free methods can simplify the analysis, especially when analyzing genome-wide data. Furthermore, alignment-free methods present the only option for emerging forms of data, such as genome skims, which do not permit assembly. Despite the appeal, alignment-free methods have not been competitive with alignment-based methods in terms of accuracy. One limitation of alignment-free methods is their reliance on simplified models of sequence evolution such as Jukes–Cantor. If we can estimate frequencies of base substitutions in an alignment-free setting, we can compute pairwise distances under more complex models. However, since the strand of DNA sequences is unknown for many forms of genome-wide data, which arguably present the best use case for alignment-free methods, the most complex models that one can use are the so-called no strand-bias models. We show how to calculate distances under a four-parameter no strand-bias model called TK4 without relying on alignments or assemblies. The main idea is to replace letters in the input sequences and recompute Jaccard indices between k-mer sets. However, on larger genomes, we also need to compute the number of k-mer mismatches after replacement due to random chance as opposed to homology. We show in simulation that alignment-free distances can be highly accurate when genomes evolve under the assumed models and study the accuracy on assembled and unassembled biological data. Availability and implementation Our software is available open source at https://github.com/nishatbristy007/NSB. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics Advances online.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy

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