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Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook

Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook

By : Tiago Antao
3.5 (4)
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Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook

Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook

3.5 (4)
By: Tiago Antao

Overview of this book

Bioinformatics is an active research field that uses a range of simple-to-advanced computations to extract valuable information from biological data. This book covers next-generation sequencing, genomics, metagenomics, population genetics, phylogenetics, and proteomics. You'll learn modern programming techniques to analyze large amounts of biological data. With the help of real-world examples, you'll convert, analyze, and visualize datasets using various Python tools and libraries. This book will help you get a better understanding of working with a Galaxy server, which is the most widely used bioinformatics web-based pipeline system. This updated edition also includes advanced next-generation sequencing filtering techniques. You'll also explore topics such as SNP discovery using statistical approaches under high-performance computing frameworks such as Dask and Spark. By the end of this book, you'll be able to use and implement modern programming techniques and frameworks to deal with the ever-increasing deluge of bioinformatics data.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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Using Mendelian error information for quality control


So, how can we infer the quality of calls using Mendelian inheritance rules? Let's look at expectations for different genotypical configurations of the parents:

  • For a certain potential bi-allelic SNP, if the mother is AA and the father is also AA, then all offspring will be AA.
  • If the mother is AA and the father TT, then all offspring will have to be heterozygous (AT). They always get an A from the mother and they always get a T from the father.
  • If the mother is AA and the father is AT, then offspring can be either AA or AT. They always get the A from the mother, but they can get either an A or a T from the father.
  • If the both the mother and the father are heterozygous (AT), then the offspring can be anything. In theory, there is not much we can do here.

In practice, we can ignore mutations, which is safe to do with most eukaryotes. The number of mutations (noise, from our perspective) is several orders of magnitude lower than the signal we...

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