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Repetitive DNA Detection and

Classification

Vijay Krishnan
Masters Student
Computer Science Department
Repetitive DNA
 Refers to substrings of the genome that
repeat multiple times.
 Different instances of the repeat element can
have slightly different patterns
 Highly prevalent in eukaryotes (organisms
with a visible nucleus and cell structure, as
opposed to bacteria)
• About 50% of the human genome is repetitive
DNA.

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Why detect repetitive DNA?
 Repeats Drive Evolution in Diverse Ways
(Kazazian, 2004).
 Repetitive DNA are generally not found to
have any function.
 Homology searches need repeat masking.
• To avoid explosion of unnecessary results.
 Repeats also contain information about
parentage.

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Hit
 Defined as a local alignment between two
regions Q and T.
 Q and T are called images of the hit.
 Q = partner(T) with respect to the hit.
 Completely defined by the endpoint
coordinates of Q and T.
 Endpoints of Q referred to as start(Q) and
end(Q).

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Dispersed Families (DF)
 Often comprise mobile elements like
Transposons and Retrotransposons.

 Images(x) = {A1, A2}


 Signature induced
by a Dispersed
Family.
 Images(y) = {A1, A3}
 Images(z) = {A2, A3}

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Tandem Arrays (TA)
 The repeating element is called a “Satellite”.

“Pyramidal”
Signature
Induced by a
Tandem
Array.

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Other Repeat Families
 Pseudo-Satellites: Intermediate between
Satellites and Dispersed Families.
 Tandem Repeat:
• Often defined to be the same as TA.
• The PILER paper defines it as images with size
50-2000 bases, separated by 50 to 15000 bases.

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De novo identification of repeat families
 Input: The Genome sequence
 Output: The repeat families and the positions
where they occur in the Genome.

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PILER: identification and
classification of genomic repeats

Robert C. Edgar
and
Eugene W. Myers
Finding Local Alignments (Hits)
 Pairwise Alignment of Local Sequences
(PALS) software used as a black box.
 Used to find local alignments of minimum
length(λ) and minimum identity(μ).
 Additional optimizations for banded search
for alignments.
• Finding regions separated by maximum distance
β.

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Pile
 Suppose we are given a list of N hits.
 This corresponds to 2N images (intervals).
 A pile is a list of all images covering a
maximal contiguous region.
• “Merge” overlapping images and “erase” the
boundaries between adjacent images.
 Let images = { [1,3], [2,4], [3,6], [8,9], [9,13] }
• Pile boundaries = { [1,6], [8,13] }.
• Pile Images = { {[1,3], [2,4], [3,6]}, {[8,9], [9,13]} }

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Construction of Piles (Example)
 Images = { [1,3], [2,4], [6,7] }

Index 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Index 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Value 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Value 1 1 1 0 0 0 0

Index 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Index 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Value 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 Value 1 2 2 1 0 1 1

Index 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Value 1 1 1 1 0 2 2

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PILER-DF
 Let G be a graph with one node for each pile, and
no edges.
 is-global-image(Q) is true if:
• #bases in Q >= g * (#bases in pile(Q))
 For each pile p in P:
• For each image Q in p:
• Let T = partner(Q)
• if is-global-image(Q) and is-global-image(T ):
– Add edge p−pile(T ) to G

 Find connected components of G of order ≥ t.


 t >= 3 to avoid segmental duplication.
 Each Connected Component is a DF.
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PILER-PS
 Similar to the problem of finding DFs, except
that PSs are typically closer to one another.
 Algorithm identical to PILER-DF except for
banded search to identify hits.
 Banded Search:
• Ensures that the PSs are clustered.
• Allows a faster and more sensitive search for
hits.

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PILER-TA
 TAs have pyramids as signatures.
 We can avoid comparing every pair of hits
since:
• Hits in a pyramid belong to the same pile.
• The images should be separated by at most
distance β (banded search).
 Define first(h) = image in h with smaller start
coordinate.
 Define last(h) = image in h with larger start
coordinate.

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PILER-TA
 For each pile p:
• Create an empty graph G with all
hits in the pile
• For each pair of hits (h1, h2) in p:
• Set shorter_length = min(|h1|, |h2|)
• Set longer_length = max(|h1|, |h2|)
• Set Q1 = first(h1) … here (B1,B2,B3)
• Set T1 = last(h1) … here (B2,B3,B4)
• Set Q2= first(h2) … here (B1,B2)
• Set T2 = last(h2) … here (B3,B4)
• Set dS = (start(Q2) − start(Q1)) / shorter_length … here 0-0=0
• Set dE = (end(T2) − end(T1)) / shorter_length …. Here 4-4 = 0
• if shorter_length / longer_length > 0.5 and
– |dS| < m and |dT | < m:
– Add edge h1 − h2 to G
 Each connected components of G is a TA.
 0 <=m <= 1. By default m= 0.05.
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PILER-TR

 Identify and mask Satellites and PSs.


 Two pass method:
• Pass1: perform banded search for TR
candidates.
• Pass2: Find hits that align TR pairs to each
other.
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Library Construction
 Use MUSCLE (Edgar, 2004a,b)
• Create multiple alignments of family members
found by PILER.
• Use these to find consensus sequences.
 This library can be used by BLAST or
RepeatMasker to find intact and partial
instances.

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Satellites and PSs in A.thalania

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De novo identification of repeat
families in large genomes

Alkes L. Price
Neil C. Jones
Pavel A. Pevzner
The RepeatScout Algorithm
 Improves on the RECON algorithm (Bao and
Eddy, 2002).
 Builds repeat families using high-frequency
L-mers as seeds.
 Input: DNA Sequences S1,…..,Sn each of
which contains a similar repeat element and
extends past the repeat element on either
side.
 Output: Substrings R1,…..,Rn that give the
repeat element boundaries, and consensus
sequence Q.

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RepeatScout (contd)
 Q is defined to be the sequence that
maximizes:
A(Q;S1,...,Sk) = [ ∑k max{a(Q,Sk),0}] -c|Q|,
 Where a(Q,Sk) can be any reasonable
sequence alignment score.
 The penalty factor c|Q| discourages long Qs,
• c can be thought of as the minimum number of
repeat elements that must align with each given
position of Q.

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Choice of a(Q,S)
 Local Alignment Score:

 Fit Alignment Score (Waterman, 1995)


• Boundaries of Q shared by all segments.
• Strict constraint on Q.
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Fit-Preferred Alignment Score

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Comparison of Alignment Scores

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Optimizing A(Q; S1, . . . , Sn)
 Even dynamic Programming for the optimal
solution is intractable.
• The problem would be n-dimensional.
• Both time and space requirements are
exponential in n.
 Greedy Heuristic:
• Suppose L is the high freqency lmer and S1, . . . ,
Sn surround its exact matches.
• Initialize Q0 to L and greedily extend Q.

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Optimizing A(Q; S1, . . . , Sn)
 N Є {A, C, G, T}
 Choose Qt+1 =Qt .N where N maximizes:
• A(Qt .N; S1, . . . , Sn)
 We can re-use alignment scores from the
previous iteration while computing alignment
scores for the (t+1)th iteration.
 Terminate after a certain no. of iterations
gives no improvement.
 Use this procedure for extending to the right,
and then to the left.
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Optimizing A(Q; S1, . . . , Sn)
 Prevent redundancy in finding consensus
sequences.
 After identifying Q, locate its occurrences
and reduce the counts of L-mers
corresponding to those locations.
 Algorithm terminates when we have no
L-mers with effective count of at least m.
 Refine Q after the optimal alignment
boundaries are determined.
 More details of parameter settings in the
paper.

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Results

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Results

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Results

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Conclusions
 Both PILER and RepeatScout address DNA
repeats.
 PILER focuses more on finding diverse kinds
of repeat families and uses MUSCLE to find
the consensus sequences
 RepeatScout focuses more on finding the
consensus sequence given members of a
repeat family.

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Thank You!

Questions?

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