- Research
- Open access
- Published:
TransFlow: a modular framework for assembling and assessing accurate de novo transcriptomes in non-model organisms
BMC Bioinformatics volume 19, Article number: 416 (2018)
Abstract
Background
The advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies are allowing more and more de novo assembling of transcriptomes from many new organisms. Some degree of automation and evaluation is required to warrant reproducibility, repetitivity and the selection of the best possible transcriptome. Workflows and pipelines are becoming an absolute requirement for such a purpose, but the issue of assembling evaluation for de novo transcriptomes in organisms lacking a sequenced genome remains unsolved. An automated, reproducible and flexible framework called TransFlow to accomplish this task is described.
Results
TransFlow with its five independent modules was designed to build different workflows depending on the nature of the original reads. This architecture enables different combinations of Illumina and Roche/454 sequencing data, and can be extended to other sequencing platforms. Its capabilities are illustrated with the selection of reliable plant reference transcriptomes and the assembling six transcriptomes (three case studies for grapevine leaves, olive tree pollen, and chestnut stem, and other three for haustorium, epiphytic structures and their combination for the phytopathogenic fungus Podosphaera xanthii). Arabidopsis and poplar transcriptomes revealed to be the best references. A common result regarding de novo assemblies is that Illumina paired-end reads of 100 nt in length assembled with OASES can provide reliable transcriptomes, while the contribution of longer reads is noticeable only when they complement a set of short, single-reads.
Conclusions
TransFlow can handle up to 181 different assembling strategies. Evaluation based on principal component analyses allows its self-adaptation to different sets of reads to provide a suitable transcriptome for each combination of reads and assemblers. As a result, each case study has its own behaviour, prioritises evaluation parameters, and gives an objective and automated way for detecting the best transcriptome within a pool of them. Sequencing data type and quantity (preferably several hundred millions of 2×100 nt or longer), assemblers (OASES for Illumina, MIRA4 and EULER-SR reconciled with CAP3 for Roche/454) and strategy (preferably scaffolding with OASES, and probably merging with Roche/454 when available) arise as the most impacting factors.
Background
The advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies allow the scientific community to resolve biological issues that were not accessible until now. Assembling of any genome using DNA-seq, or the quicker and cheaper approach of comprehensive transcriptomes using RNA-seq, are becoming feasible for most laboratories. In fact, transcript identification and its expression quantification is in the core of many molecular biology analyses. RNA-seq approaches are clearly replacing even the microarray technology for gene expression experiments or the variant calling approaches based on exomes [1, 2]. In fact, the power of RNA-seq is that, starting from short (> 50 bp) reads, it is able to identify and quantify already-known and new transcripts. Additionally, it is well adapted to produce tentative transcriptomes from genomically-unknown organisms (called “non-model organisms (NMOs)” in this work) using libraries from different tissues and development stages. Due to the high versatility and flexibility of RNA-seq, it has overcome the genomics field and has become a standard in the life sciences research (see [3] for a review of RNA-seq best practices from the experimental design to the transcript discovery and quantification, including differential expression). Therefore, having an ad hoc tentative transcriptome is nowadays the first step in most genomic studies regarding NMOs, that are organisms where reference genome is not available or is incomplete [3].
NMOs are usually very important from the economical or ecological point of view. For example, the European chestnut (Castanea sativa) is a forest tree having an important impact on producing countries due to the nutritional qualities of its fruits (chestnut) [4, 5]. Chestnut also has beneficial health effects related with the presence of bioactive compounds having antioxidant, anticarcinogenic and cardioprotective properties [6]. Another example, olive tree (Olea europaea L.), is one of the most important oil-producing plant species all over the world. Although the genome of the ‘Farga’ cultivar has been recently sequenced [7], it is still considered a NMO since this genome corresponds to a 1000+ year-old tree that presents many differences with other olive tree cultivars (J.D. Alché and M.G. Claros, personal communication). Many sequencing efforts have been performed regarding the transcriptome of vegetative tissues, but many questions involving olive reproductive biology, including seeds, are still open [8]. A third plant species, Vitis vinifera, is one of the world’s most important crop plants due to the economic value of its fruit and wine production. There is a useful draft of its genome [9], but it has been demonstrated that there is an important inter-varietal variation concerning SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) and CNVs (copy-number variations) [10]. As a result, the current state of grapevine transcriptome is far from being complete [11], which suggests that grapevine transcriptomes are still required. Finally, plant disease agents are another important source of NMOs. A disease affecting many plant crops of economical significance is the powdery mildew caused by Erysiphales [12], obligate fungal pathogens whose hallmark is the formation of a specialised structure of parasitism, called haustorium, for the acquisition of nutrients from plant cells and the delivery of virulence factors. Recently, the genomes of five powdery mildew species were sequenced, revealing that > 70 % of their genomes are repetitive sequences, which challenges genome annotation and assembling. Cucurbits are the most severely affected group by powdery mildew, but little is known of its causing agent Podosphaera xanthii, even though its epiphytic transcriptome (disregarding the haustorium) was recently elucidated [13].
Experimentally defining the complete transcriptome has traditionally been a slow, costly and challenging task, including the construction of full-length cDNA libraries. Thus, even if many genomes have been sequenced, only few transcriptomes have been extensively characterised [14]. But RNA-seq has transformed this in a straightforward task. For a reliable de novo transcriptome, it is always desirable to have many libraries to sequence from different experimental conditions, development stages, tissues or organs. A large amount of reads should then be processed to assemble any tentative transcriptome. This arises a new problem, since the computational time and memory requirements increase rapidly as the number of reads increases, while computational resources are often limited in laboratories. Moreover, different transcriptomes can be obtained depending on sequencing strategies and the assembler selection, resulting in different tentative transcript sets [15]. For example Trinity [16] or OASES [17] aim to draw as much information as possible, so that they are memory-intensive. Others, such as Trans-ABySS [18] and SOAPdenovo-Trans [19] are effective provided that the computer has enough memory. There are also assemblers giving a final result very close to the true transcriptome with few assembly errors, such as CAP3 [20] or Minimus [21] that are not ready for the high-throughput sequencing. The idea that mixing assemblers in a combined strategy would provide better transcriptomes also yields several tentative transcript sets that require further evaluation. Their suitability can be easily assessed when the genome is known, but NMOs do not have any reference sequence to compare with. That is why, in some cases, evaluation is performed empirically [22, 23]; in other cases, several parameters such as accuracy, completeness, contiguity, chimerism, etc., have been implemented to assess de novo transcriptome quality [15, 24–26]. However, a true objective and comprehensive method of evaluation is still absent.
In the quest of repetitivity and reproducibility, bioinformatic analyses should be designed as workflows or pipelines that can be easily reused or recycled [27], and this is becoming a normal practice nowadays [25]. Hence, the input of several libraries from different conditions passing through several combinations of assemblers can only be reliably approached using workflow managers [28]. Consequently, the objective of the present study is to obtain an automated, reproducible and flexible framework that allows generating a workflow able to produce accurate de novo transcriptomes, especially for NMOs. The proposed framework, TransFlow, contemplates the combination of several assemblers and several kinds of reads (disregarding for their origin) into several sets of tentative transcriptomes that we called ‘assemblies’. A series of evaluation parameters are then calculated to infer which one among them resembles as much as possible the same parameters measured in well-characterised transcriptomes of model organisms. Results for transcriptomes of tree plants (olive tree, chestnut and grapevine) and one powdery mildew causing agent are presented to illustrate TransFlow capabilities.
Methods
Raw read sources
Plant transcriptomes were obtained from Phytozome 12.1 (https://phytozome.jgi.doe.gov/pz/portal.html). Table 1 lists RNA-seq datasets used for reference transcriptome evaluation, all of them corresponding to raw 2×100 nt reads from different HiSeq machines.
Case study 1 was performed with total RNA from leaves of Vitis vinifera cultivars Escursach, Shyraz, Merlot, Garnacha and Callet and sequenced by Sistemas Genómicos (Valencia, Spain) providing 397 625 017 raw 2×100 nt reads. These data are available, but protected, at BioProject 392999.
Total RNA for case study 2 was obtained from mature pollen grains of the Olea europaea cultivar Picual as described in [8], providing a total of 216 497 raw Roche/454 paired-end reads (BioProject PRJNA287107). These data were complemented with 40 488 002 raw 2×75 nt paired-end reads from pollen, sequenced with the NextSeq 550 at the Sequencing Unit of the University of Malaga, and available, but protected, at the BioProject 392587.
For the case study 3, Castanea sativa total RNA from stem tissues was extracted and sequenced at Beijing Genomics Institute in a Illumina High-Seq 2000 to obtain 90 549 382 single-end reads of 50 bp, available at BioProject PRJNA392589. Additionally, a total of 263 165 raw Roche/454 reads were downloaded from NCBI with the accession SRR954861 and incorporated in the workflow.
For P. xanthii, 975 070 raw Roche/454 single-end reads were used from the epiphytic structures as described in [13]. This was complemented with total RNA isolated from haustoria obtained from infected zucchini cotyledons and sequenced with the NextSeq 550 at the Sequencing Unit of the University of Malaga, yielding a total of 531 447 575 raw 2×150 nt reads. All reads are available, but protected, at BioProject 393391. For this organism, two fungal transcriptome references were downloaded from Ensembl release 31. One was Neurospora crassa transcriptome comprising 9 866 protein-coding transcripts; library SRR100067, with 31 301 048 raw 2×75 nt reads from purified isolate, was used for evaluation in Module 4. The other reference transcriptome was from Candida albicans, comprising 14 217 protein-coding transcripts. The library SRR2005826, with 7 676 629 raw 2×100 nt reads from purified isolate, was used for evaluation in Module 4.
Workflow description
TransFlow is a framework developed with our workflow manager AutoFlow [28], based on Ruby scripting language. In this work, it has been executed on a SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11SP2 with Slurm queue system and Infiniband FDR/QDR network (54/40 Gbps) consisting of 216 nodes with Intel E5-2670 2.6 GHz cores for a total of 3456 cores and 8.4 TB of RAM. TransFlow can be downloaded from https://github.com/seoanezonjic/TransFlow. It also requires the installation of AutoFlow and the bioinformatic tools included in TransFlow modules, such as SeqTrimNext [29] for pre-processing; the assemblers MIRA4 [30], EULER-SR [31], CAP3 [20], OASES [17], SOAPdenovo-Trans [19], RAY [32] and Minimus2 from the suite AMOS [33]; CD-HIT EST [34] to remove sequence redundancy; and FullLengtherNext (our functional and structural annotation tool already used in many de novo transcriptome assembling reports [to cite a few, [8, 13, 22, 23, 25]]) and BUSCO [35] for evaluation parameters. Statistical analyses are processed with the R package FactoMineR [36].
TransFlow comes with up to five independent modules (Fig. 1) for assembling Illumina and Roche/454 reads (Modules 1 and 2, respectively), optional combination of both technologies (Module 3), assembly characterisation and ranking (Modules 4 and 5). Modules are independent and their presence depends on the nature of the reads. A detailed description of modules is below. Estimates execution times are quite variable, since they depend on the class and number or reads, the number of modules and the number of cores used; our longer executions take 4–5 days using up to 200 (or more) cores. Concerning the disk space, it will also depend on analysed data, but in some cases up to 4 TB of disk were temporarily allocated.
Module 1: Illumina assembling and scaffolding
Illumina raw reads are the input for this module, where reads are pre-processed with SeqTrimNext using the Illumina built-in profile. Three different assemblers (OASES, SOAPdenovo-Trans and RAY) are then executed with k-mer 25 and 35 for contig assembling to obtain the corresponding “primary assemblies” (‘ct’ tag, k-mer and the assembler name are added to the assembly name). The subsequent scaffolding step of assemblers is then allowed (‘sc’ tag is added to the assembly name) to give the so called “scaffolded assemblies” (Fig. 1). A new non-redundant assembly is obtained using CD-HIT with a identity threshold of 100% (‘cd’ tag is added to its name). Non-redundant assemblies are reconciled using Minimus2 with default parameters to provide a set of longer contigs for each pair of k-mers (‘rc’ tag is added to the assembly name).
Module 2: Roche/454 assembling and reconciliation
Again, this module starts cleaning the raw reads using SeqTrimNext with the specific built-in profile for Roche/454 reads. Two different assemblers were used with the pre-processed reads: MIRA4 (an overlap-layout-consensus assembler) executed using RNAseq settings, and EULER-SR (a de Bruijn graph assembler) executed using a k-mer 29, producing “primary assemblies” (‘ct’ tag and the assembler name are added to the assembly name). The resulting contigs of both assemblers are reconciled with CAP3 to generate a “reconciled assembly” (‘rc’ tag is added to the assembly name), that is expected to improve the primary assemblies, as previously described [8, 23].
Module 3: merging
The aim of this module is to merge data from Roche/454 and Illumina platforms to produce a set of “combined assemblies” (Fig. 1) that should be better than each non-merged assembling itself. This is why it can only be enabled when both Module 1 and Module 2 are also enabled. Three different and simultaneous approaches are contemplated for merging: 1) assembling-assembling (aa), 2) Illumina assembling-Roche/454 reads (ar), and 3) reads-reads (rr). Hence, ‘aa’, ‘ar’ or ‘rr’ tag, respectively, is added to the assembly name.
Assembly-assembly.
This approach serves to merge each Illumina primary and scaffolded assembly of Module 1 with primary and reconciled assemblies of Module 2. Two combinations are produced, one using Minimus2 with default parameters, and another using RAY with k-mers 25 and 35. Another combined assembly is obtained after redundancy removal of all Illumina primary assemblies using CD-HIT EST, and merging with the Roche/454 reconciled assembly using Minimus2. The last combined assembly is performed as stated above, but using scaffolded assemblies instead of primary assemblies.
Illumina assembly-Roche/454 reads.
Every Illumina primary and scaffolded assembly of Module 1 are merged with the Roche/454 pre-processed reads of Module 2 using MIRA4 (considering the contigs as if they were Sanger sequences), as well as using RAY with k-mers 25 and 35. Consequently, one combined assembly is obtained for each Illumina primary and scaffolded assembly.
Reads-reads.
In this case, pre-processed reads from both Module 1 and Module 2 are directly assembled together using the RAY assembler with k-mers 25 and 35, since it is the only assembler among those described above that can successfully handle this huge amount of reads.
Module 4: reference transcriptomes
This module was intended to configure well-characterised reference transcriptomes from public databases for the comparative evaluation of the last module. Reference transcriptomes, besides belonging to closely related species with respect to the testing assemblies, should derive from well known genomes, although any other draft transcriptome can also be used. RNA-seq raw reads for each reference transcriptome are also required. Every reference transcriptome is analysed using Full-LengtherNext to obtain the corresponding “evaluation parameters” described in Table 2.
Module 5: characterisation and ranking
This module is executed for every primary, scaffolded, reconciled or combined assembly loaded from any of the previous modules to provide the evaluation parameters listed in Table 2. The first set of parameters is obtained using Full-LengtherNext with full-length proteins from a specific organism division from SwissProt for assembly integrity characterisation. Note that it is not executed on reference transcriptomes as it was already done on Module 4. The last evaluation parameters of Table 2 were calculated using BUSCO for the measurement of assembly completeness by searching near-universal single-copy orthologues selected from OrthoDB [37] for a specific lineage.
For subsequent statistic analysis about factor impact on the assembling, every de novo assembly is further featured with qualitative factors referred to: 1) the ‘program’ used in the last step of assembling, 2) the ‘task’ performed, that is, the aim pursued with the program execution, 3) the ‘k-mer’ used in the assembling step, and 4) the ‘platform’ to reflect the way the nucleic acids were sequenced. A summary Table gathering features and evaluation parameters for every assembly is constructed, where every factor specifies the particular ‘category’ used. This table is investigated with a principal component analysis (PCA) using FactoMineR [36], an R package dedicated to multivariate data analysis. This package allows to perform a PCA automatically onto the data and can use supplementary data for individuals to facilitate the PCA interpretation. It also includes the ability of exploring similarities between individuals through hierarchical clustering on principal components (HCPC), offering the optimal number of clusters on the basis of the variance difference between clusters [38]. Every assembly on the summary Table is considered one individual, and the reference transcriptomes from Module 4 are supplementary individuals, which provide a reference for assembly evaluation. Those supplementary individuals do not affect the PCA structure since their evaluation parameters are introduced in the PCA function after being calculated for a particular set of assemblies, avoiding an increased variance due to differences between testing assemblies and reference transcriptomes. The PCA and subsequent analysis were performed keeping the first three components as they can explain until the 85% of the observed variance between individuals. One more capability of FactoMineR is the correlation analysis [38] using all coordinates of the test assemblies in the PCA space. This correlation analysis is executed between each evaluation parameter and the coordinates of the individuals for each one of the PCA components, giving the correlation coefficient (R) and significance (P) for each pair of evaluation parameter-PCA component. By default, all pairs with P>0.05 are discarded. Finally, the PCA results are subjected to HCPC to cluster assembling approaches. The HCPC was performed with default FactoMineR values: Euclidean distance, Ward linkage, and the optimal number of clusters computed by the HCPC function. The resulting dissimilarity matrix serves for objective assembly ranking based on averaged distances to reference transcriptomes. This matrix allows to compute the Euclidean distance from each assembly to each reference transcriptome. The Mean Distance (MD) is then calculated along the transcriptome references for each test assembly. It is assumed that the closer the assembly parameters to the references are, the better the quality of the assembly and the MD will be close to 0.
TransFlow customisation before execution
Customisation mainly refers to modules to be executed by TransFlow, execution parameters for assemblers (and others), as well as the files with reads. For convenience, all customisable variables are included within the file called launch_TransFlow.sh. Commonly editable variables are: 1) TEMPLATES (to indicate the modules that will be used), 2) reference (path to folder containing the fasta file(s) for one or more reference transcriptomes), 3) reads (path to folder containing the fastq files that will be mapped against the reference transcriptomes, 4) read_454 (file path to the 454/Roche reads), 5) ill_type (type of Illumina reads: paired or single), 6) read_illumina_pair_1 - read_illumina_pair_2 / single_illumina: path to Illumina paired/single files, respectively, 7) BUSCO_DB (specific lineage for BUSCO), 8) FLN_DB (database name for Full-LengtherNext), 9) kmers, and 10) key_organisms (identifiers from the assembly summary Table used as reference transcriptomes). Regarding k-mers, from one single value to a set of values can be indicated. An example of this file is downloaded with the TransFlow scripts (https://github.com/seoanezonjic/TransFlow/blob/master/launch_TransFlow.sh). Once customised, launch_TransFlow.sh is launched, and it executes AutoFlow to manage TransFlow modules.
TransFlow output
All results are packed in an interactive HTML report that can be conveniently inspected to choose the most suitable assembly; reports for the three case studies and for Podosphaera xanthii transcriptomes are given is Additional files 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively. The first image correspond to a heatmap of the evaluation parameters as a percent of the maximum value for all assemblies, including reference transcriptomes. Influencing parameters of Table 2 for each assembly can be inspected graphically, and the clusters of assemblies arises at the first sight. On the right of the heatmap, all PCA results and the HCPC grouping are embebed as a PDF document; some of these figures have been used for the main text of this document. Then, a series of tables are given, the first with the assembly ranking, another with the content of every assembly cluster, and the others correspond to evaluation parameters and factors, together with their weights, of the first two dimensions of the PCA. Finally, the values of each evaluation parameter for all assemblies are represented as interactive histograms, allowing users to obtain the original data, images, or change the default plot design.
Results and discussion
Plant transcriptome references
High-quality reference transcriptomes are required for accurate ranking of assemblies. Model transcriptomes for plants were chosen among well charaterised plant species, such as Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), grapevine (Vitis vinifera), wheat (Triticum aestivum), rice (Oryza sativa), poplar (Populus trichocarpa) and maize (Zea mays). Transcriptome sequences and raw reads were loaded into TransFlow enabling modules 4 and 5. The results shown in Fig. 2a suggest that grapevine transcriptome is not a good reference due to the high values of Ns and MeanGapLen (Table 2). Wheat transcriptome provides high values for FragOrtho, DuplOrtho, Contigs and AllTransSize, indicating that it is highly fragmented and highly redundant. The low values of N50, N90 and MeanContigLen for the maize transcriptome, combined with the high values of AllTransSize (the second highest) and FragOrtho indicate that it is a fragmented and redundant transcriptome. In the case of rice transcriptome, low values of Contigs500, DiffComplProts and ComplOrtho, together with the highest value of MissAssembl, drive to conclude that it is poor and incomplete. In contrast, Arabidopsis and poplar seem to be high-quality transcriptomes: Arabidopsis presents the highest values of ComplOrtho, DiffProts and DiffComplProts, whereas poplar transcriptome has the best values for N50, N90, MeanContigLen and MeanContigCov. In fact, the cluster-coloured PCA plot in Fig. 2b shows that both transcriptomes are grouped together and clearly distinct from the other four transcriptomes. In conclusion, transcriptomes of Arabidopsis and poplar were chosen as reference for the following case studies with plants.
Case study 1: assembling 2×100 short paired-end reads
The de novo assembling is based on one single class of reads, requiring only the addition of Module 1 to Modules 4 and 5 (as above). Grapevine leaves transcriptome was assembled from a huge amount (397 625 017) of Illumina paired-end reads. Reads were loaded into TransFlow to be first pre-processed with SeqTrimNext using a minimum read length of 95 nt. This yielded 299 905 026 pre-processed reads that, after assembling (with 250 GB of RAM required), produced a total of 30 assemblies, most of them clearly apart from those of Arabidopsis and poplar (Fig. 3; the complete report is in Additional file 1). Only scaffolded assemblies using OASES are really close to the reference transcriptomes, being the scOasesK35 assembly the closest one. In general, most scaffolded assemblies (tagged with ‘sc’) seem to be improved with respect to primary assemblies (tagged with ‘ct’), but this increase of quality is much more remarkable concerning OASES, for example when scOasesK35 position is compared to ctOasesK35 (boxed in blue in Fig. 3a). In conclusion, OASES seems to provide the best performance of all assemblers used in Module 1 (Fig. 3b and Table 3, grapevine rows), while RAY offers the poorest results.
Case study 2: merging 2×75 short paired-end reads and long single reads
In this case, the transcriptome will be constructed using reads from two different technologies (Illumina short reads and Roche/454 long reads) from pollen of olive tree cultivar ‘Picual’. This requires the execution of TransFlow with its five modules enabled, and about 150 GB of RAM were required. The de novo assembly started with 40 488 002 Illumina paired-end and 216 497 Roche/454 single raw reads. Pre-processing of Illumina reads setting a minimum length of 65 nt provided 32 529 229 useful paired-end reads. Pre-processing of Roche/454 with default settings provided 111 242 reads. As a result of Modules 1, 2 and 3, 181 different assemblies were generated. These assemblies were grouped into three clusters (Fig. 4; the complete report is in Additional file 2). Cluster 4.1 contains the transcriptome references, scaffolded assemblies of Illumina reads merged with Roche/454 reads, and only reconciled assemblies of Roche/454 reads. This suggests that Roche/454 reads play a role in the assembling, but are not the main players. As in the case study 1, most assembling strategies including RAY appeared in the farthest cluster 4.3 (Fig. 4), indicating again that this assembler does not yield appropriate transcriptomes.
Based on the mean distances to reference transcriptomes, the top-five assemblies (Table 3, olive tree rows) present minor differences, ranging from 0.298 to 0.368. Four of them include scaffolded assemblies using OASES, being the assembly with the lowest MD that corresponds only to Illumina reads, while the others contain a combination of both Illumina and Roche/454 reads with different approaches. Interestingly, the best assembly comes from the same approach than in case study 1, while the first assembly only containing Roche/454 reads appeared at position 64 with MD = 0.708 (MIRA4 and EULER-SR primary assemblies merged with CAP3; see Additional file 2). Therefore, Illumina reads were enough to provide the best assembling, while Roche/454 reads seems to be complementary. Since these Roche/454 were the only reads used for the first pollen transcriptome [8], it is expected that the current version of the olive tree pollen has improved it. On the other hand, combining all reads with RAY does not seem again to provide successful results, since they are mainly placed in cluster 4.3.
Case study 3: merging single, very short (50 bp) and long (Roche/454) reads
Another interesting case to study is the de novo assembling of a transcriptome using Roche/454 long reads merged with very short and single-end Illumina reads. Again, the five modules of TransFlow are necessary, but different parametrisation for Illumina assemblers is required to deal with these single, short reads. The RAM requirements were similar to case study 2 (about 150 GB). A total of 263 165 raw Roche/454 single-end reads and 90 549 382 raw Illumina single-end reads of chestnut stem were pre-processed with default parameters, providing 147 705 Roche/454 and 88 377 297 Illumina useful reads. As in the case study 2, a total of 181 different assemblies were generated and analysed. Although poplar reference is always more distant from testing assemblies in Figs. 3 and 4 (probably due to the high number of transcripts compared to Arabidopsis), the distance to chestnut assemblies in Fig. 5a is dramatically higher and distorts statistical distances. For this reason, only Arabidopsis reference transcriptome was used for ranking in this case (Fig. 5b; the complete report is in Additional file 3), providing comparable results to case studies 1 and 2.
Four clusters can be observed in Fig. 5b. The content of cluster 5.1 suggests that Roche/454 reads are more informative for chestnut assemblies than were for olive tree (case study 2), probably due to the shorter read length and the absence of paired-reads. Moreover, most Illumina assemblies are relegated to cluster 5.3, while they appeared within cluster 4.2 in case study 2, reinforcing the idea that Illumina reads are less informative in this case. A detailed inspection of the top-five assemblies based on their distance to references (Table 3, chestnut rows) clearly shows that all of them, with MDs ranging from 0.180 to 0.230, correspond to combinations of Illumina assemblies with Roche/454 reads or assemblies. However, Roche/454 reads alone are relegated to the 44th position with MD = 0.401 (see Additional file 3), which contrasts with the 64th position with a MD = 0.708 in the case of olive tree (see above). Taken together, it can be concluded that Roche/454 reads contribution in chestnut is clearly more significant than in the case of olive tree transcriptome. As expected, 2×75 nt reads reconstructed better transcriptomes than single-end 50 nt reads, which seems to be the threshold for the requirement of longer reads (such as Roche/454) for improved transcriptomes. Finally, it also demonstrates that different raw data may require different assembling approaches.
Fungal transcriptomes selected on biological structures
The versatility of TransFlow can be illustrated with the construction of several de novo transcriptomes for the fungus P. xanthii with different types of reads and biological structures. The aim was to obtain an accurate transcriptome for the haustorium, another for the epiphytic structures, and a comprehensive transcriptome covering both biological structures. The change of filum also required new external reference transcriptomes based on fungal species. The model organism Candida albicans and Neurospora crassa were chosen based on public read availability and transcriptome completeness. A total of 975 070 raw Roche/454 single reads were used from the epiphytic structures [13], and 531 447 575 raw Illumina 2×150 nt reads from low quality RNA extractions from isolated hautoria (A. Polonio and A. Pérez-García, personal communication). As in case studies 2 and 3, this required the execution of TransFlow with its 5 modules. Pre-processing tasks were done with default parameters, providing 687 517 Roche/454 and 140 862 905 Illumina pre-processed reads. The fact that only a 26.5% of Illumina reads were useful confirmed the RNA purification difficulties from haustoria. The 181 assemblies obtained were closer to reference transcriptomes than in previous case studies (compare axis ranges in Fig. 6 compared to previous figures). This indicated that the quality of reconstructed transcriptomes for P. xanthii is appropriate.
Five clusters were defined (Fig. 6; the complete report is in Additional file 4), where cluster 6.1, containing the transcriptome references, was similar to cluster 4.1. In contrast to case studies 2 and 3, the last two clusters (6.4 and 6.5) comprise most Illumina assemblies, while Roche/454 reads are more prominent in clusters 6.1 to 6.4. Moreover, in the top-five assemblies of the complete organism (Table 4, comprehensive transcriptome rows), the combined assemblies produced from Module 3 are the nearest to the reference transcriptomes, being the only-Illumina assemblies the most distant. Taken together, these results suggest that Illumina reads in this experiment yielded a poor transcriptome, while Roche/454 reads make the main contribution. This apparently contradictory behaviour may be related to the original quality of RNA used for sequencing, or alternatively to the putative low contribution of haustorium to the comprehensive transcriptome. Finally, data presented in Table 4 also serve to decide that the best haustorium transcriptome (where only Illumina reads are available) is again a scaffolded assembly using OASES, and that the best epiphytic transcriptome (made only from Roche/454 reads) was obtained after the reconciliation of MIRA4 and EULER-SR primary assemblies using CAP3, as was empirically performed in the original study [13].
Is there any ‘best assembly’?
All case study assemblies, that means, all plant assemblies, were analysed together and then compared to the Arabidopsis and poplar plant references (Fig. 7). Four clusters were obtained, with assemblies from the three plants distributed across all clusters. The best assembly of all is the grapevine scaffolded assembly using OASES and k-mer 35 (mean distance to references: 0.04); it is followed by assemblies of the other plant species (including another grapevine assembly) with distances ranging from 0.07 to 0.09 (results not shown). Even though cluster 7.1 is comprised only of grapevine assemblies, the nature of reads (long, short, paired, single...) or the number of reads to be assembled, seem to be more significant, since grapevine assemblies (the one with more Illumina “long” paired-reads) are located in the closest clusters (7.1 and 7.2), while the Roche/454 reads apear in the farthest clusters (7.3 and 7.4). The assembler is also important, since, once again, most strategies including RAY appear in the farthest cluster.
Significant evaluation parameters
Assembling strategies based on OASES have produced suitable transcriptomes, from illumina reads alone or merged with Roche/454 long reads, depending on the nature of the original reads. Contribution of each evaluation parameter of Table 2 to the final decision was inspected based on the top-three parameters in the first two dimensions of PCA (Table 5), where FactoMineR settings give significance when P<0.05. Regarding plant references, the most significant parameters were only in the first dimension: Contigs, Contigs500, AllTransSize and FragOrtho, all of them being the main signs of transcriptome completeness, and absence of redundancy. This indirectly supports that the evaluation parameters were highly suitable when optimal assemblies are evaluated. Contigs500 deserves a mention, since it is also important for the first dimension when Roche/454 reads are available, and it appears in the second dimension when only Illumina reads are available. On the contrary, Contigs and AllTransSize are relegated to the second dimension, when present, for de novo assemblies. The evaluation parameters that emerge for de novo assemblies are N50 (twice in the first dimension and once in the second dimension), ComplOrth and DiffComplProts (twice in the first dimension), and N90 and MeanContigLen (once in the first dimension and twice in the second dimension). In conclusion, each case study has its own behaviour and weights differently the evaluation parameters, with a self-adapted strategy that gives an objective and automatised way for detecting suitable assemblies (transcriptomes) within a pool of them. Gene expression studies are ongoing with these suitable transcripts.
Conclusions
It has been shown that TransFlow can objectively assess the quality of up to 181 different assembling strategies to extract which one reconstruct a transcriptome of similar quality to an external reference. Since it is based on PCA, it is self-adapted to every set of experimental reads. It has been revealed that 2×100 nt reads (or maybe longer) and OASES assembler can provide very good transcriptomes, and that the contribution of Roche/454 reads is noticeable only when short, single-reads were used. Moreover, it seems that OASES is a good Illumina assembler and RAY is a bad transcriptome assembler. The evaluation parameters of Table 2 were accurate for reference transcriptomes, as inferred from Table 5, indicating that all assemblies analysed in this manuscript are suboptimal (assembling parameters have not been optimised for each dataset in the seek of comparison), suggesting that new assemblers or new combination strategies can improve the final transcriptome.
For convenience, most case studies have been performed with plants with the same reference transcriptome. The inclusion of a fungal study with Neurospora crassa and Candida albicans as reference transcriptomes illustrates that TransFlow depends only on the nature of reads and not the source, provided that a relatively close species can be used as transcriptome references. In fact, we are currently using TransFlow in our laboratories to assemble genomes from sole (a flatfish).
Although TransFlow has been tested here only with a limited number of assemblers, it can be customised or extended with more assemblers and more strategies. In future versions of TransFlow we plan to add a new modules capable of handle SMRT or Nanopore reads, since these technologies will become more and more present in high-throughput studies than the deprecated, although useful, Roche/454 reads. Additionally, TransFlow can be used as a benchmarking platform for assembler evaluation as follows: the combination of Modules 4 and 5, without further modification, can evaluate not only reference transcriptomes, but also several de novo transcriptomes assembled with other strategies.
The framework cannot only increase in complexity, but also in simplicity. For example, since (i) Illumina primary assemblies were always improved by scaffolded assemblies, (ii) Roche/454 primary assemblies are improved by reconciled assemblies, and (iii) approaches based on RAY are on the farthest positions, primary assemblies of Modules 1 and 2 and RAY assembler should be removed in future versions of TransFlow, while other assemblers would be included depending on literature comparisons.
The complete HTML report also offers the scientist the possibility of monitoring the evolution of assemblies, that is, if the strategy is approaching the initial assembly to the reference or not. Also, one can see if there is any factor that is clearly influencing on the strategies or the quality of reads.
References
Byron SA, Van Keuren-Jensen KR, Engelthaler DM, Carpten JD, Craig DW. Translating rna sequencing into clinical diagnostics: opportunities and challenges. Nat Rev Genet. 2016; 17(5):257–71. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrg.2016.10.
Cummings BB, Marshall JL, Tukiainen T, Lek M, Donkervoort S, Foley AR, Bolduc V, Waddell LB, Sandaradura SA, O’Grady GL, Estrella E, Reddy HM, Zhao F, Weisburd B, Karczewski KJ, O’Donnell-Luria AH, Birnbaum D, Sarkozy A, Hu Y, Gonorazky H, Claeys K, Joshi H, Bournazos A, Oates EC, Ghaoui R, Davis MR, Laing NG, Topf A, Genotype-Tissue Expression Consortium, Kang PB, Beggs AH, North KN, Straub V, Dowling JJ, Muntoni F, Clarke NF, Cooper ST, Bönnemann CG, MacArthur DG. Improving genetic diagnosis in mendelian disease with transcriptome sequencing. Sci Transl Med. 2017; 9(386). https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aal5209.
Conesa A, Madrigal P, Tarazona S, Gomez-Cabrero D, Cervera A, McPherson A, Szcześniak MW, Gaffney DJ, Elo LL, Zhang X, Mortazavi A. A survey of best practices for rna-seq data analysis. Genome Biol. 2016; 17:13. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0881-8.
Quintana J, Contreras A, Merino I, Vinuesa A, Orozco G, Ovalle F, Gomez L. Genetic characterization of chestnut (castanea sativa mill.) orchards and traditional nut varieties in el bierzo, a glacial refuge and major cultivation site in northwestern spain. Tree Genet Genomes. 2015; 11(1):826. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11295-014-0826-x.
De Vasconcelos MCBM, Bennett RN, Rosa EAS, Ferreira-Cardoso JV. Composition of european chestnut (castanea sativa mill.) and association with health effects: fresh and processed products. J Sci Food Agric. 2010; 90(10):1578–89. https://doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.4016.
Braga N, Rodrigues F, Oliveira MBPP. Castanea sativa by-products: a review on added value and sustainable application. Nat Prod Res. 2015; 29(1):1–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/14786419.2014.955488.
Cruz F, Julca I, Gómez-Garrido J, Loska D, Marcet-Houben M, Cano E, Galán B, Frias L, Ribeca P, Derdak S, Gut M, Sánchez-Fernández M, García JL, Gut IG, Vargas P, Alioto TS, Gabaldón T. Genome sequence of the olive tree, olea europaea. Gigascience. 2016; 5:29. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13742-016-0134-5.
Carmona R, Zafra A, Seoane P, Castro AJ, Guerrero-Fernández D, Castillo-Castillo T, Medina-García A, Cánovas FM, Aldana-Montes JF, Navas-Delgado I, Alché JdD, Claros MG. Reprolive: a database with linked data for the olive tree (olea europaea l.) reproductive transcriptome. Front Plant Sci. 2015; 6:625. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2015.00625.
Jaillon O, Aury J-M, Noel B, Policriti A, Clepet C, Casagrande A, Choisne N, Aubourg S, Vitulo N, Jubin C, Vezzi A, Legeai F, Hugueney P, Dasilva C, Horner D, Mica E, Jublot D, Poulain J, Bruyère C, Billault A, Segurens B, Gouyvenoux M, Ugarte E, Cattonaro F, Anthouard V, Vico V, Del Fabbro C, Alaux M, Di Gaspero G, Dumas V, Felice N, Paillard S, Juman I, Moroldo M, Scalabrin S, Canaguier A, Le Clainche I, Malacrida G, Durand E, Pesole G, Laucou V, Chatelet P, Merdinoglu D, Delledonne M, Pezzotti M, Lecharny A, Scarpelli C, Artiguenave F, Pè ME, Valle G, Morgante M, Caboche M, Adam-Blondon A-F, Weissenbach J, Quétier F, Wincker P. The grapevine genome sequence suggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla. Nature. 2007; 449(7161):463–7. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06148.
Cardone MF, D’Addabbo P, Alkan C, Bergamini C, Catacchio CR, Anaclerio F, Chiatante G, Marra A, Giannuzzi G, Perniola R, Ventura M, Antonacci D. Inter-varietal structural variation in grapevine genomes. Plant J. 2016; 88(4):648–61. https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.13274.
Grimplet J, Van Hemert J, Carbonell-Bejerano P, Díaz-Riquelme J, Dickerson J, Fennell A, Pezzotti M, Martínez-Zapater JM. Comparative analysis of grapevine whole-genome gene predictions, functional annotation, categorization and integration of the predicted gene sequences. BMC Res Notes. 2012; 5:213. https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-5-213.
Glawe DA. The powdery mildews: a review of the world’s most familiar (yet poorly known) plant pathogens. Annu Rev Phytopathol. 2008; 46:27–51. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.phyto.46.081407.104740.
Vela-Corcía D, Bautista R, de Vicente A, Spanu PD, Pérez-García A. De novo analysis of the epiphytic transcriptome of the cucurbit powdery mildew fungus podosphaera xanthii and identification of candidate secreted effector proteins. PLoS One. 2016; 11(10):0163379. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0163379.
Yassour M, Kaplan T, Fraser HB, Levin JZ, Pfiffner J, Adiconis X, Schroth G, Luo S, Khrebtukova I, Gnirke A, Nusbaum C, Thompson D-A, Friedman N, Regev A. Ab initio construction of a eukaryotic transcriptome by massively parallel mrna sequencing. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2009; 106(9):3264–9. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0812841106.
Hara Y, Tatsumi K, Yoshida M, Kajikawa E, Kiyonari H, Kuraku S. Optimizing and benchmarking de novo transcriptome sequencing: from library preparation to assembly evaluation. BMC Genomics. 2015; 16:977. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-015-2007-1.
Grabherr MG, Haas BJ, Yassour M, Levin JZ, Thompson DA, Amit I, Adiconis X, Fan L, Raychowdhury R, Zeng Q, Chen Z, Mauceli E, Hacohen N, Gnirke A, Rhind N, di Palma F, Birren BW, Nusbaum C, Lindblad-Toh K, Friedman N, Regev A. Full-length transcriptome assembly from rna-seq data without a reference genome. Nat Biotechnol. 2011; 29(7):644–52. https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.1883.
Schulz MH, Zerbino DR, Vingron M, Birney E. Oases: robust de novo rna-seq assembly across the dynamic range of expression levels. Bioinformatics. 2012; 28(8):1086–92. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bts094.
Robertson G, Schein J, Chiu R, Corbett R, Field M, Jackman SD, Mungall K, Lee S, Okada HM, Qian JQ, Griffith M, Raymond A, Thiessen N, Cezard T, Butterfield YS, Newsome R, Chan SK, She R, Varhol R, Kamoh B, Prabhu A-L, Tam A, Zhao Y, Moore RA, Hirst M, Marra MA, Jones SJM, Hoodless PA, Birol I. De novo assembly and analysis of rna-seq data. Nat Methods. 2010; 7(11):909–12. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.1517.
Xie Y, Wu G, Tang J, Luo R, Patterson J, Liu S, Huang W, He G, Gu S, Li S, Zhou X, Lam T-W, Li Y, Xu X, Wong GK-S, Wang J. Soapdenovo-trans: de novo transcriptome assembly with short rna-seq reads. Bioinformatics. 2014; 30(12):1660–6. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btu077.
Huang X, Madan A. Cap3: A dna sequence assembly program. Genome Res. 1999; 9(9):868–77.
Sommer DD, Delcher AL, Salzberg SL, Pop M. Minimus: a fast, lightweight genome assembler. BMC Bioinformatics. 2007; 8:64. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-8-64.
Fernández-Pozo N, Canales J, Guerrero-Fernández D, Villalobos DP, Díaz-Moreno SM, Bautista R, Flores-Monterroso A, Guevara MÁ, Perdiguero P, Collada C, Cervera MT, Soto A, Ordás R, Cantón FR, Avila C, Cánovas FM, Claros MG. Europinedb: a high-coverage web database for maritime pine transcriptome. BMC Genomics. 2011; 12:366. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-366.
Benzekri H, Armesto P, Cousin X, Rovira M, Crespo D, Merlo MA, Mazurais D, Bautista R, Guerrero-Fernández D, Fernandez-Pozo N, Ponce M, Infante C, Zambonino JL, Nidelet S, Gut M, Rebordinos L, Planas JV, Bégout M-L, Claros MG, Manchado M. De novo assembly, characterization and functional annotation of senegalese sole (solea senegalensis) and common sole (solea solea) transcriptomes: integration in a database and design of a microarray. BMC Genomics. 2014; 15:952. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-15-952.
Martin JA, Wang Z. Next-generation transcriptome assembly. Nat Rev Genet. 2011; 12(10):671–82. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrg3068.
Ocaña S, Seoane P, Bautista R, Palomino C, Claros GM, Torres AM, Madrid E. Large-scale transcriptome analysis in faba bean (vicia faba l.) under ascochyta fabae infection. PLoS One. 2015; 10(8):0135143. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0135143.
Rana SB, Zadlock IV FJ, Zhang Z, Murphy WR, Bentivegna CS. Comparison of de novo transcriptome assemblers and k-mer strategies using the killifish, fundulus heteroclitus. PLoS One. 2016; 11(4):0153104. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153104.
Boekel J, Chilton JM, Cooke IR, Horvatovich PL, Jagtap PD, Käll L, Lehtiö J, Lukasse P, Moerland PD, Griffin TJ. Multi-omic data analysis using galaxy. Nat Biotechnol. 2015; 33(2):137–9. https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.3134.
Seoane P, Ocaña S, Carmona R, Bautista R, Madrid E, Torres AM, Claros MG. Autoflow, a versatile workflow engine illustrated by assembling an optimised de novo transcriptome for a non-model species, such as faba bean (vicia faba). Curr Bioinf. 2016; 11(4):440–50. https://doi.org/10.2174/1574893611666160212235117.
Falgueras J, Lara AJ, Fernandez-Pozo N, Canton FR, Perez-Trabado G, Claros MG. SeqTrim: a high-throughput pipeline for preprocessing any type of sequence reads. BMC Bioinformatics. 2010; 11(1):38. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-11-38.
Chevreux B, Pfisterer T, Drescher B, Driesel AJ, Müller WEG, Wetter T, Suhai S. Using the miraEST Assembler for Reliable and Automated mRNA Transcript Assembly and SNP Detection in Sequenced ESTs. Genome Res. 2004; 14:1147–59.
Pevzner PA, Tang H, Waterman MS. An Eulerian path approach to DNA fragment assembly. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2001; 98(17):9748–53. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.171285098.
Boisvert S, Laviolette F, Corbeil J. Ray: simultaneous assembly of reads from a mix of high-throughput sequencing technologies. J Comp Biol. 2010; 17(11):1519–33. https://doi.org/10.1089/cmb.2009.0238.
Treangen TJ, Sommer DD, Angly FE, Koren S, Pop M. Next generation sequence assembly with AMOS. Curr Protoc Bioinformatics. 2011; (SUPP.33):1–18. https://doi.org/10.1002/0471250953.bi1108s33. NIHMS150003.
Li W, Godzik A. CD-HIT: a fast program for clustering and comparing large sets of protein or nucleotide sequences. Bioinformatics. 2006; 22(13):1658–9. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btl158.
Simão FA, Waterhouse RM, Ioannidis P, Kriventseva EV, Zdobnov EM. BUSCO: Assessing genome assembly and annotation completeness with single-copy orthologs. Bioinformatics. 2015; 31(19):3210–2. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btv351.
Husson F, Josse J, Lê S. Factominer, an r package dedicated to exploratory multivariate analysis. J Stat Softw. 2008; 25(1):1–18. https://doi.org/10.18637/jss.v025.i01.
Zdobnov EM, Tegenfeldt F, Kuznetsov D, Waterhouse RM, Simao FA, Ioannidis P, Seppey M, Loetscher A, Kriventseva EV. OrthoDB v9.1: Cataloging evolutionary and functional annotations for animal, fungal, plant, archaeal, bacterial and viral orthologs. Nucl Acids Res. 2017; 45(D1):744–9. 10.1093/nar/gkw1119. 1611.06654.
Husson F, Josse J, Pagès J. Principal component methods - hierarchical clustering - partitional clustering: why would we need to choose for visualizing data?Technical report, Agrocampus Ouest. 2010. http://factominer.free.fr/more/HCPC_husson_josse.pdf.
Acknowledgements
This work would not have been possible without the computer resources and the technical support provided by the Plataforma Andaluza de Bioinformática of the University of Málaga.
Funding
This work was supported by co-funding by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) 2014-2020 “Programa Operativo de Crecimiento Inteligente” together with Spanish AEI “Agencia Estatal de Investigación” (BFU2016-77243-P, RTC-2015-4181-2, RTC-2016-4824-2, AGL2013-41939-R and AGL2016-76216-C2-1-R), AEI-INIA (RTA2013-00023-C02 and RTA2013-00068-C03), and Junta de Andalucía (P2011-CVI-7487), as well as CSIC grant 201540E065. PS received a post-doctoral fellowship from Junta de Andalucía linked to grant P10-CVI-6075. Publication costs were funded by the mentioned RTA2013-00068-C03 grant.
Availability of data and materials
Plant transcriptomes are available from Phytozome 12.1 (https://phytozome.jgi.doe.gov/pz/portal.html). RNA-seq datasets with accession numbers SRR4897845, SRR1030352, SRR1282039, SRR2072478, DRR003148, SRR954861, SRR1282039, SRR100067, SRR2005826 as well as the BioProjects 392999, PRJNA287107, 392587 and PRJNA392589, are available at Sequence Read Archive (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra). TransFlow can be downloaded from https://github.com/seoanezonjic/TransFlow.
About this supplement
This article has been published as part of BMC Bioinformatics Volume 19 Supplement 14, 2018: Selected articles from the 5th International Work-Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering: bioinformatics. The full contents of the supplement are available online at https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/supplements/volume-19-supplement-14.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
PS and ME defined the assembling approaches. PS, ME and RC programmed the workflows. ME, RC, AP, EC, JQ, and JB collected and prepared the reads. APG, JDA, LG and MGC analysed and compared the results. PS and MGC prepared the manuscript. All authors have read, contributed and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Additional files
Additional file 1
HTML report of TransFlow for Study Case 1 (grapevine). The zip file contains the elements of the report: the HTML file called assembly_report.html that can be open in any browser (javascript must be enabled) and inspected thoroughly; the folder js must be side-by-side to the HTML file for the right function. (ZIP 674 kb)
Additional file 2
HTML report of TransFlow for Study Case 2 (olive tree). The zip file contains the elements of the report: the HTML file called assembly_report.html that can be open in any browser (javascript must be enabled) and inspected thoroughly; the folder js must be side-by-side to the HTML file for the right function. (ZIP 903 kb)
Additional file 3
HTML report of TransFlow for Study Case 3 (chestnut) using only Arabidopsis as reference transcriptome. The zip file contains the elements of the report: the HTML file called assembly_report.html that can be open in any browser (javascript must be enabled) and inspected thoroughly; the folder js must be side-by-side to the HTML file for the right function. (ZIP 890 kb)
Additional file 4
HTML report of TransFlow for P. xanthii. The zip file contains the elements of the report: the HTML file called assembly_report.html that can be open in any browser (javascript must be enabled) and inspected thoroughly; the folder js must be side-by-side to the HTML file for the right function. (ZIP 889 kb)
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
About this article
Cite this article
Seoane, P., Espigares, M., Carmona, R. et al. TransFlow: a modular framework for assembling and assessing accurate de novo transcriptomes in non-model organisms. BMC Bioinformatics 19 (Suppl 14), 416 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-018-2384-y
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-018-2384-y