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Using 2k + 2 bubble searches to find SNPs in k-mer graphs
[article]
2014
bioRxiv
pre-print
Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) discovery is an important preliminary for understanding genetic variation. With current sequencing methods we can sample genomes comprehensively. SNPs are found by aligning sequence reads against longer assembled references. De Bruijn graphs are efficient data structures that can deal with the vast amount of data from modern technologies. Recent work has shown that the topology of these graphs captures enough information to allow the detection and
doi:10.1101/004507
fatcat:4uolngs2ybbrvbsqzlfb77vsca