dEploid
is designed for deconvoluting mixed genomes with unknown proportions. Traditional ‘phasing’ programs are limited to diploid organisms. Our method modifies Li and Stephen’s algorithm with Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) approaches, and builds a generic framework that allows haloptype searches in a multiple infection setting.
Please see the documentation for further details.
You can also install dEploid
directly from the git repository. Here, you will need autoconf
, check whether this is already installed by running:
$ which autoconf
On Debian/Ubuntu based systems:
$ apt-get install build-essential autoconf autoconf-archive libcppunit-dev zlib1g-dev
On Mac OS:
$ port install automake autoconf autoconf-archive cppunit
Afterwards you can clone the code from the github repository,
$ git clone git@github.com:mcveanlab/DEploid.git
$ cd DEploid
and build the binary using
$ ./bootstrap
$ make
Please see the documentation for further details.
You can freely use all code in this project under the conditions of the GNU GPL Version 3 or later.
If you use dEploid
with the flag -ibd
, please cite the following paper:
Zhu, J. S., J. A. Hendry, J. Almagro-Garcia, R. D. Pearson, R. Amato, A. Miles, D. J. Weiss, T. C. D. Lucas, M. Nguyen, P. W. Gething, D. Kwiatkowski, G. McVean, and for the Pf3k Project. (2018) The origins and relatedness structure of mixed infections vary with local prevalence of P. falciparum malaria. biorxiv, doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/387266.
If you use dEploid
in your work, please cite the program:
Zhu, J. S. J. A. Garcia G. McVean. (2018) Deconvolution of multiple infections in Plasmodium falciparum from high throughput sequencing data. Bioinformatics 34(1), 9-15. doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btx530.