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Oxford University Press, Nucleic Acids Research, 22(40), p. e171-e171, 2012

DOI: 10.1093/nar/gks754

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Compression of next-generation sequencing reads aided by highly efficient de novo assembly

Journal article published in 2012 by Daniel C. Jones, Walter L. Ruzzo ORCID, Xinxia Peng, Michael G. Katze
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

We present Quip, a lossless compression algorithm for next-generation sequencing data in the FASTQ and SAM/BAM formats. In addition to implementing reference-based compression, we have developed, to our knowledge, the first assembly-based compressor, using a novel de novo assembly algorithm. A probabilistic data structure is used to dramatically reduce the memory required by traditional de Bruijn graph assemblers, allowing millions of reads to be assembled very efficiently. Read sequences are then stored as positions within the assembled contigs. This is combined with statistical compression of read identifiers, quality scores, alignment information, and sequences, effectively collapsing very large datasets to less than 15% of their original size with no loss of information. Availability: Quip is freely available under the BSD license from http://cs.washington.edu/homes/dcjones/quip.