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WABI
2001
Springer

Comparing Assemblies Using Fragments and Mate-Pairs

14 years 5 months ago
Comparing Assemblies Using Fragments and Mate-Pairs
Using current technology, large consecutive stretches of DNA (such as whole chromosomes) are usually assembled from short fragments obtained by shotgun sequencing, or from fragments and mate-pairs, if a “double-barreled” shotgun strategy is employed. The positioning of the fragments (and mate-pairs, if available) in an assembled sequence can be used to evaluate the quality of the assembly and also to compare two different assemblies of the same chromosome, even if they are obtained from two different sequencing projects. This paper describes some simple and fast methods of this type that were developed to evaluate and compare different assemblies of the human genome. Additional applications are in “feature-tracking” from one version of an assembly to the next, comparisons of different chromosomes within the same genome and comparisons between similar chromosomes from different species.
Daniel H. Huson, Aaron L. Halpern, Zhongwu Lai, Eu
Added 30 Jul 2010
Updated 30 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2001
Where WABI
Authors Daniel H. Huson, Aaron L. Halpern, Zhongwu Lai, Eugene W. Myers, Knut Reinert, Granger G. Sutton
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