CALDERA: finding all significant de Bruijn subgraphs for bacterial GWAS

Author:

Roux de Bézieux Hector1,Lima Leandro2,Perraudeau Fanny1,Mary Arnaud3,Dudoit Sandrine4,Jacob Laurent3

Affiliation:

1. Pendulum Therapeutics, Inc. , San Francisco, CA 94107, USA

2. European Bioinformatics Institute , Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK

3. Univ. Lyon, Université Lyon 1, CNRS, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Évolutive UMR 5558 , Villeurbanne 69100, France

4. Division of Biostatistics, Department of Statistics, University of California , Berkeley, CA 94704, USA

Abstract

Abstract Motivation Genome-wide association studies (GWAS), aiming to find genetic variants associated with a trait, have widely been used on bacteria to identify genetic determinants of drug resistance or hypervirulence. Recent bacterial GWAS methods usually rely on k-mers, whose presence in a genome can denote variants ranging from single-nucleotide polymorphisms to mobile genetic elements. This approach does not require a reference genome, making it easier to account for accessory genes. However, a same gene can exist in slightly different versions across different strains, leading to diluted effects. Results Here, we overcome this issue by testing covariates built from closed connected subgraphs (CCSs) of the de Bruijn graph defined over genomic k-mers. These covariates capture polymorphic genes as a single entity, improving k-mer-based GWAS both in terms of power and interpretability. However, a method naively testing all possible subgraphs would be powerless due to multiple testing corrections, and the mere exploration of these subgraphs would quickly become computationally intractable. The concept of testable hypothesis has successfully been used to address both problems in similar contexts. We leverage this concept to test all CCSs by proposing a novel enumeration scheme for these objects which fully exploits the pruning opportunity offered by testability, resulting in drastic improvements in computational efficiency. Our method integrates with existing visual tools to facilitate interpretation. Availability and implementation We provide an implementation of our method, as well as code to reproduce all results at https://github.com/HectorRDB/Caldera_ISMB. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computational Mathematics,Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Statistics and Probability

Reference27 articles.

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3. Predictive computational phenotyping and biomarker discovery using reference-free genome comparisons;Drouin;BMC Genomics,2016

4. Identifying lineage effects when controlling for population structure improves power in bacterial association studies;Earle;Nat. Microbiol,2016

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