Abstract

BackgroundBisulfite sequencing (BS-Seq) is a fundamental technique for characterizing DNA methylation profiles. Genotype calling from bisulfite-converted BS-Seq data allows allele-specific methylation analysis and the concurrent exploration of genetic and epigenetic profiles. Despite various methods have been proposed, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) calling from BS-Seq data, particularly for SNPs on chromosome X and in the presence of contaminative data, poses ongoing challenges.ResultsWe introduce bsgenova, a novel SNP caller tailored for bisulfite sequencing data, employing a Bayesian multinomial model. The performance of bsgenova is assessed by comparing SNPs called from real-world BS-Seq data with those from corresponding whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data across three human cell lines. bsgenova is both sensitive and precise, especially for chromosome X, compared with three existing methods. Moreover, in the presence of low-quality reads, bsgenova outperforms other methods notably. In addition, bsgenova is meticulously implemented, leveraging matrix imputation and multi-process parallelization. Compared to existing methods, bsgenova stands out for its speed and efficiency in memory and disk usage. Furthermore, bsgenova integrates bsextractor, a methylation extractor, enhancing its flexibility and expanding its utility.ConclusionsWe introduce bsgenova for SNP calling from bisulfite-sequencing data. The source code is available at https://github.com/hippo-yf/bsgenova under license GPL-3.0.

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