Comparative Genomics Lab

Acibadem University, Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics

TEfinder: A Bioinformatics Pipeline for Detecting New Transposable Element Insertion Events in Next-Generation Sequencing Data


Journal article


Vista Sohrab, Cristina López-Díaz, A. Di Pietro, Li‐Jun Ma, Dilay Hazal Ayhan
Genes, 2020

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Sohrab, V., López-Díaz, C., Pietro, A. D., Ma, L. J., & Ayhan, D. H. (2020). TEfinder: A Bioinformatics Pipeline for Detecting New Transposable Element Insertion Events in Next-Generation Sequencing Data. Genes.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Sohrab, Vista, Cristina López-Díaz, A. Di Pietro, Li‐Jun Ma, and Dilay Hazal Ayhan. “TEfinder: A Bioinformatics Pipeline for Detecting New Transposable Element Insertion Events in Next-Generation Sequencing Data.” Genes (2020).


MLA   Click to copy
Sohrab, Vista, et al. “TEfinder: A Bioinformatics Pipeline for Detecting New Transposable Element Insertion Events in Next-Generation Sequencing Data.” Genes, 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{vista2020a,
  title = {TEfinder: A Bioinformatics Pipeline for Detecting New Transposable Element Insertion Events in Next-Generation Sequencing Data},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {Genes},
  author = {Sohrab, Vista and López-Díaz, Cristina and Pietro, A. Di and Ma, Li‐Jun and Ayhan, Dilay Hazal}
}

Abstract

Transposable elements (TEs) are mobile elements capable of introducing genetic changes rapidly. Their importance has been documented in many biological processes, such as introducing genetic instability, altering patterns of gene expression, and accelerating genome evolution. Increasing appreciation of TEs has resulted in a growing number of bioinformatics software to identify insertion events. However, the application of existing tools is limited by either narrow-focused design of the package, too many dependencies on other tools, or prior knowledge required as input files that may not be readily available to all users. Here, we reported a simple pipeline, TEfinder, developed for the detection of new TE insertions with minimal software and input file dependencies. The external software requirements are BEDTools, SAMtools, and Picard. Necessary input files include the reference genome sequence in FASTA format, an alignment file from paired-end reads, existing TEs in GTF format, and a text file of TE names. We tested TEfinder among several evolving populations of Fusarium oxysporum generated through a short-term adaptation study. Our results demonstrate that this easy-to-use tool can effectively detect new TE insertion events, making it accessible and practical for TE analysis.