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Build Status Coverage Status

C++ interface to HTSlib, BWA-MEM and Fermi

License: Apache2

API Documentation

API Documentation

Citation

If you use SeqLib in your applications, please cite: http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2016/12/21/bioinformatics.btw741.full.pdf+html

Note that the values for the SeqAn benchmarking in Table 2 should be corrected to 7.7 Gb memory and 33.92 seconds in CPU time, when compiling SeqAn with -O3 -DNDEBUG. SeqAn also does full string decompression. Wall times for SeqAn may be shorter than CPU time because it uses embedded multi-threading during BAM IO.

Table of contents

Installation

#######

git clone --recursive https://github.com/walaj/SeqLib.git
cd SeqLib
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. ## if system htslib not found, add to the cmake .. command this: -DHTSLIB_DIR=/path/to/htslib
make

You will need to have JsonCPP (v1.9.4 or higher) installed.

I have successfully compiled with GCC-4.5+ and Clang on Linux and OSX.

SeqLib is compatible with c++11 and later.

Integrating into build system

After building, you will need to add the relevant header directories:

SEQ=<path_to_seqlib_git_repos>
C_INCLUDE_PATH=$C_INCLUDE_PATH:$SEQ:$SEQ/htslib

And need to link the SeqLib static library and Fermi, BWA and HTSlib libraries

SEQ=<path_to_seqlib>
LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS $SEQ/bin/libseqlib.a $SEQ/bin/libbwa.a $SEQ/bin/libfml.a $SEQ/bin/libhts.a"

To add support for reading BAMs, etc with HTTPS, FTP, S3, Google cloud, etc, you must compile and link with libcurl.

## set hts to build with libcurl links and hfile_libcurl.c
cd SeqLib/htslib
./configure --enable-libcurl 
## compile seqlib with libcurl support
cd ../ # back to SeqLib main directory
./configure LDFLAGS="-lcurl -lcrypto"
make 
make install

Remember then to then link any projects made with SeqLib with the additional -lcurl -lcrypto flags.

Description

SeqLib is a C++ library for querying BAM/SAM/CRAM files, performing BWA-MEM operations in memory, and performing sequence assembly. Core operations in SeqLib are peformed by:

The primary developer for these three projects is Heng Li.

SeqLib also has support for storing and manipulating genomic intervals via GenomicRegion and GenomicRegionCollection. It uses an interval tree (provided by Erik Garrison @ekg) to provide for rapid interval queries.

SeqLib is built to be extendable. See VariantBam for examples of how to take advantage of C++ class extensions to build off of the SeqLib base functionality.

Memory management

SeqLib is built to automatically handle memory management of C code from BWA-MEM and HTSlib by using C++ smart pointers that handle freeing memory automatically. One of the main motivations behind SeqLib is that all access to sequencing reads, BWA, etc should completely avoid malloc and free. In SeqLib all the mallocs/frees are handled automatically in the constructors and destructors.

Other C++ APIs

There are overlaps between this project and BamTools from Derek Barnett, Gamgee from the Broad Institute, and SeqAn from Freie Universitat Berlin. These projects provide excellent and high quality APIs. SeqLib provides further performance enhancement and new capabilites for certain classes of bioinformatics problems.

Some differences:

  • SeqLib has ~2-4x faster read/write speed over BamTools and lower memory footprint.
  • SeqLib has support for CRAM file
  • SeqLib provides in memory access to BWA-MEM, BLAT, chromosome aware interval tree, read correction, and sequence assembly with Fermi.
  • SeqAn provide a substantial amount of additional capabilites not in SeqLib, including graph operations and an expanded suite of multi-sequence alignments.
  • SeqAn embeds multi-threading into some functionality like BAM IO to improve wall times.

For your particular application, our hope is that SeqLib will provide a comprehensive and powerful envrionment to develop bioinformatics tools, or to be used in conjuction with the capablities in SeqAn and BamTools. Feature requests and comments are welcomed.

Examples

Targeted re-alignment of reads to a given region with BWA-MEM
#include "SeqLib/RefGenome.h"
#include "SeqLib/BWAWrapper.h"
using namespace SeqLib;
RefGenome ref;
ref.LoadIndex("hg19.fasta");

// get sequence at given locus
std::string seq = ref.QueryRegion("1", 1000000,1001000);

// Make an in-memory BWA-MEM index of region
BWAWrapper bwa;
UnalignedSequenceVector usv = {{"chr_reg1", seq}};
bwa.ConstructIndex(usv);

// align an example string with BWA-MEM
std::string querySeq = "CAGCCTCACCCAGGAAAGCAGCTGGGGGTCCACTGGGCTCAGGGAAG";
BamRecordVector results;
// hardclip=false, secondary score cutoff=0.9, max secondary alignments=10
bwa.AlignSequence(querySeq, "my_seq", results, false, 0.9, 10); 

// print results to stdout
for (auto& i : results)
    std::cout << i << std::endl;
Read a BAM line by line, realign reads with BWA-MEM, write to new BAM
#include "SeqLib/BamReader.h"
#include "SeqLib/BWAWrapper.h"
using namespace SeqLib;

// open the reader BAM/SAM/CRAM
BamReader bw;
bw.Open("test.bam");

// open a new interface to BWA-MEM
BWAWrapper bwa;
bwa.LoadIndex("hg19.fasta");

// open the output BAM
BamWriter writer; // or writer(SeqLib::SAM) or writer(SeqLib::CRAM) 
writer.SetWriteHeader(bwa.HeaderFromIndex());
writer.Open("out.bam");
writer.WriteHeader();

BamRecord r;
bool hardclip = false;
float secondary_cutoff = 0.90; // secondary alignments must have score >= 0.9*top_score
int secondary_cap = 10; // max number of secondary alignments to return
while (GetNextRecord(r)) {
      BamRecordVector results; // alignment results (can have multiple alignments)
      bwa.AlignSequence(r.Sequence(), r.Qname(), results, hardclip, secondary_cutoff, secondary_cap);

      for (auto& i : results)
        writer.WriteRecord(i);
}
Perform sequence assembly with Fermi directly from a BAM

#include "SeqLib/FermiAssembler.h"
using namespace SeqLib;

FermiAssembler f;

// read in data from a BAM
BamReader br;
br.Open("test_data/small.bam");

// retreive sequencing reads (up to 20,000)
BamRecord r;
BamRecordVector brv;
size_t count = 0;
while(br.GetNextRead(r) && count++ < 20000) 
  brv.push_back(r);

// add the reads and error correct them  
f.AddReads(brv);
f.CorrectReads();

// peform the assembly
f.PerformAssembly();

// retrieve the contigs
std::vector<std::string> contigs = f.GetContigs();

// write as a fasta to stdout
for (size_t i = 0; i < contigs.size(); ++i)
    std::cout << ">contig" << i << std::endl << contigs[i] << std::endl;
Plot a collection of gapped alignments
using namespace SeqLib;
BamReader r;
r.Open("test_data/small.bam");

GenomicRegion gr("X:1,002,942-1,003,294", r.Header());
r.SetRegion(gr);

SeqPlot s;
s.SetView(gr);

BamRecord rec;
BamRecordVector brv;
while(r.GetNextRecord(rec))
  if (!rec.CountNBases() && rec.MappedFlag())
    brv.push_back(rec);
s.SetPadding(20);

std::cout << s.PlotAlignmentRecords(brv);

Trimmed output from above (NA12878):

CTATCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTGTCCATCCATCCATCCATCCA
CTATCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTAT                    CATCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATTCATCCATCCACCTATCCATCTATCAATCCATCCATCCATCCA
 TATCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCA              
 TATCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTGTCCATCCATCCATCCATC                        
 TATCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCA              
  ATCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCAT             
   TCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGCTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATC                    GTCCATCCATCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATTCATCCATCCACCTATCCATCTATCAATCCATCCATCCATCCATCCGTCTATCTTATGCATCACAGC
   TCTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATT                                                                  
    CTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATTC                                                                 
    CTATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATTC                                                                 
      ATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATTCAT                                                               
      ATCTATCTCTTCTTCTGTCCGTTCATGTGTCTGTCCATCTATCTATCCATCTATCTATCATCTAACTATCTG----TCCATCCATCCATCCATCCACCCATTCAT                                                               
Read simultaneously from a BAM, CRAM and SAM file and send to stdout
using namespace SeqLib;
#include "SeqLib/BamReader.h"
BamReader r;
  
// read from multiple streams coordinate-sorted order
r.Open("test_data/small.bam");
r.Open("test_data/small.cram");
r.Open("test_data/small.sam");

BamWriter w(SeqLib::SAM); // set uncompressed output
w.Open("-");              // write to stdout
w.SetHeader(r.Header());  // specify the header
w.WriteHeader();          // write out the header

BamRecord rec;
while(r.GetNextRecord(rec)) 
  w.WriteRecord(rec);
w.Close();               // Optional. Will close on destruction
Perform error correction on reads, using BFC
#include "SeqLib/BFC.h"
using namespace SeqLib;

// brv is some set of reads to train the error corrector
for (BamRecordVector::const_iterator r = brv.begin(); r != brv.end(); ++r)
    b.AddSequence(r->Sequence().c_str(), r->Qualities().c_str(), r->Qname().c_str());
b.Train();
b.clear(); // clear the training sequences. Training parameters saved in BFC object

// brv2 is some set to correct
for (BamRecordVector::const_iterator r = brv2.begin(); r != brv2.end(); ++r)
    b.AddSequence(r->Sequence().c_str(), r->Qualities().c_str(), r->Qname().c_str());
b.ErrorCorrect();

// retrieve the sequences
UnalignedSequenceVector v;
std::string name, seq;
while (b.GetSequences(seq, name))
  v.push_back({name, seq});      			   

Support

This project is being actively developed and maintained by Jeremiah Wala (jwala@broadinstitute.org).

Attributions

We would like to thank Heng Li (htslib/bwa/fermi), Erik Garrison (interval tree), Christopher Gilbert (aho corasick), and Mengyao Zhao (sw alignment), for providing open-source and robust bioinformatics solutions.

Development, support, guidance, testing:

  • Steve Huang - Research Scientist, Broad Institute
  • Steve Schumacher - Computational Biologist, Dana Farber Cancer Institute
  • Cheng-Zhong Zhang - Research Scientist, Broad Institute
  • Marcin Imielinski - Assistant Professor, Cornell University
  • Rameen Beroukhim - Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School