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  • How to compare de novo and reference mappings in SNPs analysis?

    Hello. I am a beginner in this field and I have a question, sorry if it is obvious !

    In SNPs analysis (by Stacks software) with FASTQ sample files (from Illumina), I perform 2 different analyses:
    – the first one is a reference mapping: the FASTQ sample files are aligned with a FASTA genome file by Bowtie or BWA softwares, then the SAM result files are analysed by Stacks and a TSV text result file is generated (with informations like chromosome and base positions, consensus sequences, SNPs, alleles variations, etc.);
    – the second one is a de novo mapping: the FASTQ sample files are directly analysed by Stacks and a TSV result file is generated (with the same informations as first case);

    I would like to compare the results of these 2 analyses (reference versus de novo).

    Firstly, I sorted the lines inside the 2 result files (keeping only the consensus sequence informations) and performed a text comparison with Meld software, but this method has one weaknesse: one difference in the consensus sequence will result in a total mismatch…

    Secondly, I generated a FASTA file from the de novo's TSV result file which was analysed after by the same aligner as first case (Bowtie or BWA, generating a SAM result file), in order to obtain position informations, and again I sorted the files (keeping only the consensus sequences and position informations) and performed a comparison with Meld, but again this method has some weaknesses: a small difference in consensus sequence or in the position (on the same chromosome, for example) will also result in a total mismatch… I also noticed that many matching sequences have a position difference of 1 base for the exactly same consensus sequence…

    I would like to know if there are softwares which can help me, for example by making an alignment between the short sequences of these 2 files (SAM or TSV/CSV text files), if possible taking into account the position informations (obtained from the first alignment with a reference genome: chromosome and base position), without forgetting that my purpose is to compare results in SNPs analysis.

    Thank you very much for your time and your potential help.

    Sincerely yours.

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