Difference between revisions of "Minimus"
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
[[minimus2]] is a modified version of the minimus pipeline designed for merging two sequence sets. Instead of hash-overlap it uses a nucmer based overlap detector which is much faster. | [[minimus2]] is a modified version of the minimus pipeline designed for merging two sequence sets. Instead of hash-overlap it uses a nucmer based overlap detector which is much faster. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | == Documentation == | ||
Documentation on running minimus is included with the distribution in the /docs subdirectory. | Documentation on running minimus is included with the distribution in the /docs subdirectory. |
Revision as of 20:54, 3 June 2009
Overview
minimus is an assembly pipeline designed specifically for small data-sets, such as the set of reads covering a specific gene. Note that the code will work for larger assemblies (we have used it to assemble bacterial genomes), however, due to its stringency, the resulting assembly will be highly fragmented. For large and/or complex assemblies the execution of Minimus should be followed by additional processing steps, such as scaffolding.
minimus follows the Overlap-Layout-Consensus paradigm and consists of three main modules:
- overlapper - computes the overlaps between the reads using a modified version of the Smith-Waterman local alignment algorithm
- tigger - uses the read overlaps to generate the layouts of reads representing individual contigs
- make-consensus - refines the layouts produced by the tigger to generate accurate multiple alignments within the reads
minimus uses as AMOS messages as both the inputs and the outputs. Please see the File Converters documentation for more information.
minimus2 is a modified version of the minimus pipeline designed for merging two sequence sets. Instead of hash-overlap it uses a nucmer based overlap detector which is much faster.
Documentation
Documentation on running minimus is included with the distribution in the /docs subdirectory.
Examples
Examples of a flu assembly and a Zebrafish gene can be found in the test/minimus directory created when the AMOS distribution is untarred. Documentation on the examples is included with the distribution in /docs/minimus.README.
Acknowledgements
The development of minimus was supported by the National Institutes of Health under grants R01-LM06845 and R01-LM007938 to SLS and by Department of Homeland Security cooperative agreement W81XWH-05-2-0051.