You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Thanks for your great tool which helps me a lot.
I wonder if there is an option/parameter to output the vcf file which contains not only the allele of tumor sample but also the normal sample. For example:
#CHROM POS ID REF ALT QUAL FILTER INFO FORMAT Patient_01_Germline Patient_01_Somatic
1 69091 . A C,G . PASS AF=0.1122 GT 1/0 2/1
1 69849 . G A,C . PASS AF=0.1122 GT 1/0 2/1
1 69511 . A C,G . PASS AF=0.3580 GT 1/1 2/2
As you can see from the above example, for chr1:69091, reference genome is 'A', germline(normal sample) is 'C' and somatic(tumor sample) is 'G'.
It is the right thing to use this kind of format to annotate cancer samples with tools like SnpEff since we actually want to know what would happen when 'C' change into 'G' (normal vs. tumor) instead of 'A'-->'G' (ref vs. tumor), but I struggle dealing with this problem and still have no idea.
I will be very grateful if you can give me some advice! And thanks in advance.
All the best,
He
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
fredsamhaak
changed the title
Output base/genotype of the normal sample
Output allele of the normal sample
Aug 31, 2023
SomaticSeq's GT annotation isn't very sophisticated.
How was that VCF format obtained? From which tool? I don't think SomaticSeq would put germline variant and somatic variant in the same ALT field.
Hi @litaifang, for now I don't find tools which would output that kind of VCF format but SnpEff ask for that (pls check it from here) when annotating cancer samples for somatic variants, which seems reasonable.
Do you have any ideas or suggestions about it? Thank you Li Tai.
Hi @litaifang,
Thanks for your great tool which helps me a lot.
I wonder if there is an option/parameter to output the vcf file which contains not only the allele of tumor sample but also the normal sample. For example:
As you can see from the above example, for chr1:69091, reference genome is 'A', germline(normal sample) is 'C' and somatic(tumor sample) is 'G'.
It is the right thing to use this kind of format to annotate cancer samples with tools like SnpEff since we actually want to know what would happen when 'C' change into 'G' (normal vs. tumor) instead of 'A'-->'G' (ref vs. tumor), but I struggle dealing with this problem and still have no idea.
I will be very grateful if you can give me some advice! And thanks in advance.
All the best,
He
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: