Call somatic SNVs and indels via local assembly of haplotypes
Category Short Variant Discovery
Overview
Call somatic short mutations via local assembly of haplotypes. Short mutations include single nucleotide (SNA) and insertion and deletion (indel) alterations. The caller uses a Bayesian somatic genotyping model that differs from the original MuTect by Cibulskis et al., 2013 and uses the assembly-based machinery of HaplotypeCaller. Of note, Mutect2 v4.1.0.0 onwards enables joint analysis of multiple samples.
This tool is featured in the Somatic Short Mutation calling Best Practice Workflow. See Tutorial#11136 for a step-by-step description of the workflow and Article#11127 for an overview of what traditional somatic calling entails. For the latest pipeline scripts, see the Mutect2 WDL scripts directory. For pipelines with example data, see the gatk-workflows repository. Although we present the tool for somatic calling, it may apply to other contexts, such as mitochondrial variant calling and detection of somatic mosaicism.
Starting with v4.1.0.0 Mutect2 accomodates extreme high depths, e.g. 20,000X. See the following articles for details on this and additional applications.
- Blog#23400 details general improvements to Mutect2 v4.1.0.0.
- Blog#23598 details Mutect2 mitochondrial mode.
- Blog#XXX (link to come) details use of Mutect2 in extremely low allele fraction variant detection.
Usage examples
Example commands show how to run Mutect2 for typical scenarios. The three modes are (i) tumor-normal mode where a tumor sample is matched with a normal sample in analysis, (ii) tumor-only mode where a single sample's alignment data undergoes analysis, and (iii) mitochondrial mode where sensitive calling at high depths is desirable.
- As of v4.1, there is no longer a need to specify the tumor sample name with -tumor. You need only specify the normal sample name with -normal, if you include a normal.
- Starting with v4.0.4.0, GATK recommends the default setting of --af-of-alleles-not-in-resource, which the tool dynamically adjusts for different modes. tumor-only calling sets the default to 5e-8, tumor-normal calling sets it to 1e-6 and mitochondrial mode sets it to 4e-3. For previous versions, the default was 0.001, the average heterozygosity of humans. For other organisms, change --af-of-alleles-not-in-resource to 1/(ploidy*samples in resource).
(i) Tumor with matched normal
Given a matched normal, Mutect2 is designed to call somatic variants only. The tool includes logic to skip emitting variants that are clearly present in the germline based on provided evidence, e.g. in the matched normal. This is done at an early stage to avoid spending computational resources on germline events. If the variant's germline status is borderline, then Mutect2 will emit the variant to the callset for subsequent filtering by FilterMutectCalls and review.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -I tumor.bam \ -I normal.bam \ -normal normal_sample_name \ --germline-resource af-only-gnomad.vcf.gz \ --panel-of-normals pon.vcf.gz \ -O somatic.vcf.gz
Mutect2 also generates a stats file names [output vcf].stats. That is, in the above example the stats file would be named somatic.vcf.gz.stats and would be in the same folder as somatic.vcf.gz. As of GATK 4.1.1 this file is a required input to FilterMutectCalls.
As of v4.1 Mutect2 supports joint calling of multiple tumor and normal samples from the same individual. The only difference is that -I and -normal must be specified for the extra samples.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -I tumor1.bam \ -I tumor2.bam \ -I normal1.bam \ -I normal2.bam \ -normal normal1_sample_name \ -normal normal2_sample_name \ --germline-resource af-only-gnomad.vcf.gz \ --panel-of-normals pon.vcf.gz \ -O somatic.vcf.gz
(ii) Tumor-only mode
This mode runs on a single type of sample, e.g. the tumor or the normal. To create a PoN, call on each normal sample in this mode, then use CreateSomaticPanelOfNormals to generate the PoN.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -I sample.bam \ -O single_sample.vcf.gz
To call mutations on a tumor sample, call in this mode using a PoN and germline resource. After FilterMutectCalls filtering, consider additional filtering by functional significance with Funcotator.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -I sample.bam \ --germline-resource af-only-gnomad.vcf.gz \ --panel-of-normals pon.vcf.gz \ -O single_sample.vcf.gz
(iii) Mitochondrial mode
Mutect2 automatically sets parameters appropriately for calling on mitochondria with the --mitochondria flag. Specifically, the mode sets --initial-tumor-lod to 0, --tumor-lod-to-emit to 0, --af-of-alleles-not-in-resource to 4e-3, and the advanced parameter --pruning-lod-threshold to -4.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -L chrM \ --mitochondria-mode \ -I mitochondria.bam \ -O mitochondria.vcf.gz
The mode accepts only a single sample, which can be provided in multiple files.
(iv) Force-calling mode
This mode force-calls all alleles in force-call-alleles.vcf in addition to any other variants Mutect2 discovers.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -I sample.bam \ -alleles force-call-alleles.vcf -O single_sample.vcf.gz
If the sample is suspected to exhibit orientation bias artifacts (such as in the case of FFPE tumor samples) one should also collect F1R2 metrics by adding an --f1r2-tar-gz argument as shown below. This file contains information that can then be passed to LearnReadOrientationModel, which generate an artifact prior table for each tumor sample for FilterMutectCalls to use.
gatk Mutect2 \ -R reference.fa \ -I sample.bam \ --f1r2-tar-gz f1r2.tar.gz \ -O single_sample.vcf.gz
Notes
- Mutect2 does not require a germline resource nor a panel of normals (PoN) to run, although both are recommended. The tool prefilters sites for the matched normal and the PoN.
- If a variant is absent from a given germline
resource, then the value for --af-of-alleles-not-in-resource is used as an imputed allele frequency. Below is an excerpt of a known variants
resource with population allele frequencies.
#CHROM POS ID REF ALT QUAL FILTER INFO 1 10067 . T TAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCC 30.35 PASS AC=3;AF=7.384E-5 1 10108 . CAACCCT C 46514.32 PASS AC=6;AF=1.525E-4 1 10109 . AACCCTAACCCT AAACCCT,* 89837.27 PASS AC=48,5;AF=0.001223,1.273E-4 1 10114 . TAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCCTAACCCTAACCCTAAACCCTA *,CAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAACCCCTAACCCTAACCCTAAACCCTA,T 36728.97 PASS AC=55,9,1;AF=0.001373,2.246E-4,2.496E-5 1 10119 . CT C,* 251.23 PASS AC=5,1;AF=1.249E-4,2.498E-5 1 10120 . TA CA,* 14928.74 PASS AC=10,6;AF=2.5E-4,1.5E-4 1 10128 . ACCCTAACCCTAACCCTAAC A,* 285.71 PASS AC=3,1;AF=7.58E-5,2.527E-5 1 10131 . CT C,* 378.93 PASS AC=7,5;AF=1.765E-4,1.261E-4 1 10132 . TAACCC *,T 18025.11 PASS AC=12,2;AF=3.03E-4,5.049E-5
- Additional parameters that factor towards filtering are available in
FilterMutectCalls.
While the tool calculates normal-lod assuming a diploid genotype, it calculates
normal-artifact-lod with the same approach it uses for tumor-lod, i.e. with a variable ploidy assumption.
- If the normal artifact log odds becomes large, then FilterMutectCalls applies the artifact-in-normal filter..
- The tumor log odds, which is calculated independently of any matched normal, determines whether to filter a tumor variant. Variants with tumor LODs exceeding the threshold pass filtering.
Additional Information
Read filters
These Read Filters are automatically applied to the data by the Engine before processing by Mutect2.
- NonChimericOriginalAlignmentReadFilter
- NotSecondaryAlignmentReadFilter
- GoodCigarReadFilter
- NonZeroReferenceLengthAlignmentReadFilter
- PassesVendorQualityCheckReadFilter
- ReadLengthReadFilter
- MappedReadFilter
- MappingQualityAvailableReadFilter
- NotDuplicateReadFilter
- MappingQualityReadFilter
- MappingQualityNotZeroReadFilter
- WellformedReadFilter
Mutect2 specific arguments
This table summarizes the command-line arguments that are specific to this tool. For more details on each argument, see the list further down below the table or click on an argument name to jump directly to that entry in the list.
Argument name(s) | Default value | Summary | |
---|---|---|---|
Required Arguments | |||
--input -I |
BAM/SAM/CRAM file containing reads | ||
--output -O |
File to which variants should be written | ||
--reference -R |
Reference sequence file | ||
Optional Tool Arguments | |||
--af-of-alleles-not-in-resource -default-af |
-1.0 | Population allele fraction assigned to alleles not found in germline resource. Please see docs/mutect/mutect2.pdf fora derivation of the default value. | |
--alleles |
The set of alleles to force-call regardless of evidence | ||
--annotation -A |
One or more specific annotations to add to variant calls | ||
--annotation-group -G |
One or more groups of annotations to apply to variant calls | ||
--annotations-to-exclude -AX |
One or more specific annotations to exclude from variant calls | ||
--arguments_file |
read one or more arguments files and add them to the command line | ||
--assembly-region-out |
Output the assembly region to this IGV formatted file | ||
--assembly-region-padding |
100 | Number of additional bases of context to include around each assembly region | |
--base-quality-score-threshold |
18 | Base qualities below this threshold will be reduced to the minimum (6) | |
--callable-depth |
10 | Minimum depth to be considered callable for Mutect stats. Does not affect genotyping. | |
--cloud-index-prefetch-buffer -CIPB |
-1 | Size of the cloud-only prefetch buffer (in MB; 0 to disable). Defaults to cloudPrefetchBuffer if unset. | |
--cloud-prefetch-buffer -CPB |
40 | Size of the cloud-only prefetch buffer (in MB; 0 to disable). | |
--disable-bam-index-caching -DBIC |
false | If true, don't cache bam indexes, this will reduce memory requirements but may harm performance if many intervals are specified. Caching is automatically disabled if there are no intervals specified. | |
--disable-sequence-dictionary-validation |
false | If specified, do not check the sequence dictionaries from our inputs for compatibility. Use at your own risk! | |
--dont-use-dragstr-pair-hmm-scores |
false | disable DRAGstr pair-hmm score even when dragstr-params-path was provided | |
--downsampling-stride -stride |
1 | Downsample a pool of reads starting within a range of one or more bases. | |
--dragstr-het-hom-ratio |
2 | het to hom prior ratio use with DRAGstr on | |
--dragstr-params-path |
location of the DRAGstr model parameters for STR error correction used in the Pair HMM. When provided, it overrides other PCR error correcting mechanisms | ||
--enable-dynamic-read-disqualification-for-genotyping |
false | Will enable less strict read disqualification low base quality reads | |
--f1r2-max-depth |
200 | sites with depth higher than this value will be grouped | |
--f1r2-median-mq |
50 | skip sites with median mapping quality below this value | |
--f1r2-min-bq |
20 | exclude bases below this quality from pileup | |
--f1r2-tar-gz |
If specified, collect F1R2 counts and output files into this tar.gz file | ||
--founder-id |
Samples representing the population "founders" | ||
--gcs-max-retries -gcs-retries |
20 | If the GCS bucket channel errors out, how many times it will attempt to re-initiate the connection | |
--gcs-project-for-requester-pays |
Project to bill when accessing "requester pays" buckets. If unset, these buckets cannot be accessed. User must have storage.buckets.get permission on the bucket being accessed. | ||
--genotype-germline-sites |
false | (EXPERIMENTAL) Call all apparent germline site even though they will ultimately be filtered. | |
--genotype-pon-sites |
false | Call sites in the PoN even though they will ultimately be filtered. | |
--germline-resource |
Population vcf of germline sequencing containing allele fractions. | ||
--graph-output -graph |
Write debug assembly graph information to this file | ||
--help -h |
false | display the help message | |
--ignore-itr-artifacts |
false | Turn off read transformer that clips artifacts associated with end repair insertions near inverted tandem repeats. | |
--initial-tumor-lod -init-lod |
2.0 | Log 10 odds threshold to consider pileup active. | |
--interval-merging-rule -imr |
ALL | Interval merging rule for abutting intervals | |
--intervals -L |
One or more genomic intervals over which to operate | ||
--max-assembly-region-size |
300 | Maximum size of an assembly region | |
--max-population-af -max-af |
0.01 | Maximum population allele frequency in tumor-only mode. | |
--max-reads-per-alignment-start |
50 | Maximum number of reads to retain per alignment start position. Reads above this threshold will be downsampled. Set to 0 to disable. | |
--min-assembly-region-size |
50 | Minimum size of an assembly region | |
--min-base-quality-score -mbq |
10 | Minimum base quality required to consider a base for calling | |
--mitochondria-mode |
false | Mitochondria mode sets emission and initial LODs to 0. | |
--native-pair-hmm-threads |
4 | How many threads should a native pairHMM implementation use | |
--native-pair-hmm-use-double-precision |
false | use double precision in the native pairHmm. This is slower but matches the java implementation better | |
--normal-lod |
2.2 | Log 10 odds threshold for calling normal variant non-germline. | |
--normal-sample -normal |
BAM sample name of normal(s), if any. May be URL-encoded as output by GetSampleName with -encode argument. | ||
--panel-of-normals -pon |
VCF file of sites observed in normal. | ||
--pcr-indel-qual |
40 | Phred-scaled PCR indel qual for overlapping fragments | |
--pcr-snv-qual |
40 | Phred-scaled PCR SNV qual for overlapping fragments | |
--pedigree -ped |
Pedigree file for determining the population "founders" | ||
--sites-only-vcf-output |
false | If true, don't emit genotype fields when writing vcf file output. | |
--tumor-lod-to-emit -emit-lod |
3.0 | Log 10 odds threshold to emit variant to VCF. | |
--version |
false | display the version number for this tool | |
Optional Common Arguments | |||
--add-output-sam-program-record |
true | If true, adds a PG tag to created SAM/BAM/CRAM files. | |
--add-output-vcf-command-line |
true | If true, adds a command line header line to created VCF files. | |
--create-output-bam-index -OBI |
true | If true, create a BAM/CRAM index when writing a coordinate-sorted BAM/CRAM file. | |
--create-output-bam-md5 -OBM |
false | If true, create a MD5 digest for any BAM/SAM/CRAM file created | |
--create-output-variant-index -OVI |
true | If true, create a VCF index when writing a coordinate-sorted VCF file. | |
--create-output-variant-md5 -OVM |
false | If true, create a a MD5 digest any VCF file created. | |
--disable-read-filter -DF |
Read filters to be disabled before analysis | ||
--disable-tool-default-read-filters |
false | Disable all tool default read filters (WARNING: many tools will not function correctly without their default read filters on) | |
--exclude-intervals -XL |
One or more genomic intervals to exclude from processing | ||
--gatk-config-file |
A configuration file to use with the GATK. | ||
--interval-exclusion-padding -ixp |
0 | Amount of padding (in bp) to add to each interval you are excluding. | |
--interval-padding -ip |
0 | Amount of padding (in bp) to add to each interval you are including. | |
--interval-set-rule -isr |
UNION | Set merging approach to use for combining interval inputs | |
--lenient -LE |
false | Lenient processing of VCF files | |
--QUIET |
false | Whether to suppress job-summary info on System.err. | |
--read-filter -RF |
Read filters to be applied before analysis | ||
--read-index |
Indices to use for the read inputs. If specified, an index must be provided for every read input and in the same order as the read inputs. If this argument is not specified, the path to the index for each input will be inferred automatically. | ||
--read-validation-stringency -VS |
SILENT | Validation stringency for all SAM/BAM/CRAM/SRA files read by this program. The default stringency value SILENT can improve performance when processing a BAM file in which variable-length data (read, qualities, tags) do not otherwise need to be decoded. | |
--seconds-between-progress-updates |
10.0 | Output traversal statistics every time this many seconds elapse | |
--sequence-dictionary |
Use the given sequence dictionary as the master/canonical sequence dictionary. Must be a .dict file. | ||
--tmp-dir |
Temp directory to use. | ||
--use-jdk-deflater -jdk-deflater |
false | Whether to use the JdkDeflater (as opposed to IntelDeflater) | |
--use-jdk-inflater -jdk-inflater |
false | Whether to use the JdkInflater (as opposed to IntelInflater) | |
--verbosity |
INFO | Control verbosity of logging. | |
Advanced Arguments | |||
--active-probability-threshold |
0.002 | Minimum probability for a locus to be considered active. | |
--adaptive-pruning-initial-error-rate |
0.001 | Initial base error rate estimate for adaptive pruning | |
--allele-informative-reads-overlap-margin |
2 | Likelihood and read-based annotations will only take into consideration reads that overlap the variant or any base no further than this distance expressed in base pairs | |
--allow-non-unique-kmers-in-ref |
false | Allow graphs that have non-unique kmers in the reference | |
--bam-output -bamout |
File to which assembled haplotypes should be written | ||
--bam-writer-type |
CALLED_HAPLOTYPES | Which haplotypes should be written to the BAM | |
--debug-assembly -debug |
false | Print out verbose debug information about each assembly region | |
--disable-adaptive-pruning |
false | Disable the adaptive algorithm for pruning paths in the graph | |
--disable-cap-base-qualities-to-map-quality |
false | If false this disables capping of base qualities in the HMM to the mapping quality of the read | |
--disable-symmetric-hmm-normalizing |
false | Toggle to revive legacy behavior of asymmetrically normalizing the arguments to the reference haplotype | |
--disable-tool-default-annotations |
false | Disable all tool default annotations | |
--dont-increase-kmer-sizes-for-cycles |
false | Disable iterating over kmer sizes when graph cycles are detected | |
--dont-use-soft-clipped-bases |
false | Do not analyze soft clipped bases in the reads | |
--emit-ref-confidence -ERC |
NONE | Mode for emitting reference confidence scores (For Mutect2, this is a BETA feature) | |
--enable-all-annotations |
false | Use all possible annotations (not for the faint of heart) | |
--expected-mismatch-rate-for-read-disqualification |
0.02 | Error rate used to set expectation for post HMM read disqualification based on mismatches | |
--force-active |
false | If provided, all regions will be marked as active | |
--force-call-filtered-alleles -genotype-filtered-alleles |
false | Force-call filtered alleles included in the resource specified by --alleles | |
--gvcf-lod-band -LODB |
[-2.5, -2.0, -1.5, -1.0, -0.5, 0.0, 0.5, 1.0] | Exclusive upper bounds for reference confidence LOD bands (must be specified in increasing order) | |
--independent-mates |
false | Allow paired reads to independently support different haplotypes. Useful for validations with ill-designed synthetic data. | |
--kmer-size |
[10, 25] | Kmer size to use in the read threading assembler | |
--linked-de-bruijn-graph |
false | If enabled, the Assembly Engine will construct a Linked De Bruijn graph to recover better haplotypes | |
--max-mnp-distance -mnp-dist |
1 | Two or more phased substitutions separated by this distance or less are merged into MNPs. | |
--max-num-haplotypes-in-population |
128 | Maximum number of haplotypes to consider for your population | |
--max-prob-propagation-distance |
50 | Upper limit on how many bases away probability mass can be moved around when calculating the boundaries between active and inactive assembly regions | |
--max-suspicious-reads-per-alignment-start |
0 | Maximum number of suspicious reads (mediocre mapping quality or too many substitutions) allowed in a downsampling stride. Set to 0 to disable. | |
--max-unpruned-variants |
100 | Maximum number of variants in graph the adaptive pruner will allow | |
--min-dangling-branch-length |
4 | Minimum length of a dangling branch to attempt recovery | |
--min-pruning |
2 | Minimum support to not prune paths in the graph | |
--minimum-allele-fraction -min-AF |
0.0 | Lower bound of variant allele fractions to consider when calculating variant LOD | |
--num-pruning-samples |
1 | Number of samples that must pass the minPruning threshold | |
--pair-hmm-gap-continuation-penalty |
10 | Flat gap continuation penalty for use in the Pair HMM | |
--pair-hmm-implementation -pairHMM |
FASTEST_AVAILABLE | The PairHMM implementation to use for genotype likelihood calculations | |
--pcr-indel-model |
CONSERVATIVE | The PCR indel model to use | |
--phred-scaled-global-read-mismapping-rate |
45 | The global assumed mismapping rate for reads | |
--pruning-lod-threshold |
2.302585092994046 | Ln likelihood ratio threshold for adaptive pruning algorithm | |
--pruning-seeding-lod-threshold |
9.210340371976184 | Ln likelihood ratio threshold for seeding subgraph of good variation in adaptive pruning algorithm | |
--recover-all-dangling-branches |
false | Recover all dangling branches | |
--showHidden |
false | display hidden arguments | |
--smith-waterman |
JAVA | Which Smith-Waterman implementation to use, generally FASTEST_AVAILABLE is the right choice | |
--soft-clip-low-quality-ends |
false | If enabled will preserve low-quality read ends as softclips (used for DRAGEN-GATK BQD genotyper model) | |
Deprecated Arguments | |||
--tumor-sample -tumor |
BAM sample name of tumor. May be URL-encoded as output by GetSampleName with -encode argument. |
Argument details
Arguments in this list are specific to this tool. Keep in mind that other arguments are available that are shared with other tools (e.g. command-line GATK arguments); see Inherited arguments above.
--active-probability-threshold
Minimum probability for a locus to be considered active.
double 0.002 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--adaptive-pruning-initial-error-rate
Initial base error rate estimate for adaptive pruning
Initial base error rate guess for the probabilistic adaptive pruning model. Results are not very sensitive to this
parameter because it is only a starting point from which the algorithm discovers the true error rate.
double 0.001 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--add-output-sam-program-record / -add-output-sam-program-record
If true, adds a PG tag to created SAM/BAM/CRAM files.
boolean true
--add-output-vcf-command-line / -add-output-vcf-command-line
If true, adds a command line header line to created VCF files.
boolean true
--af-of-alleles-not-in-resource / -default-af
Population allele fraction assigned to alleles not found in germline resource. Please see docs/mutect/mutect2.pdf fora derivation of the default value.
Population allele fraction assigned to alleles not found in germline resource.
double -1.0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--allele-informative-reads-overlap-margin
Likelihood and read-based annotations will only take into consideration reads that overlap the variant or any base no further than this distance expressed in base pairs
int 2 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--alleles
The set of alleles to force-call regardless of evidence
FeatureInput[VariantContext] null
--allow-non-unique-kmers-in-ref
Allow graphs that have non-unique kmers in the reference
By default, the program does not allow processing of reference sections that contain non-unique kmers. Disabling
this check may cause problems in the assembly graph.
boolean false
--annotation / -A
One or more specific annotations to add to variant calls
Which annotations to include in variant calls in the output. These supplement annotations provided by annotation groups.
List[String] []
--annotation-group / -G
One or more groups of annotations to apply to variant calls
Which groups of annotations to add to the output variant calls.
Any requirements that are not met (e.g. failing to provide a pedigree file for a pedigree-based annotation) may cause the run to fail.
List[String] []
--annotations-to-exclude / -AX
One or more specific annotations to exclude from variant calls
Which annotations to exclude from output in the variant calls. Note that this argument has higher priority than the
-A or -G arguments, so these annotations will be excluded even if they are explicitly included with the other
options.
List[String] []
--arguments_file
read one or more arguments files and add them to the command line
List[File] []
--assembly-region-out
Output the assembly region to this IGV formatted file
If provided, this walker will write out its assembly regions
to this file in the IGV formatted TAB-delimited output:
http://www.broadinstitute.org/software/igv/IGV
Intended to make debugging the active region calculations easier
String null
--assembly-region-padding
Number of additional bases of context to include around each assembly region
Parameters that control assembly regions
int 100 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--bam-output / -bamout
File to which assembled haplotypes should be written
The assembled haplotypes and locally realigned reads will be written as BAM to this file if requested. Really
for debugging purposes only. Note that the output here does not include uninformative reads so that not every
input read is emitted to the bam.
Turning on this mode may result in serious performance cost for the caller. It's really only appropriate to
use in specific areas where you want to better understand why the caller is making specific calls.
The reads are written out containing an "HC" tag (integer) that encodes which haplotype each read best matches
according to the haplotype caller's likelihood calculation. The use of this tag is primarily intended
to allow good coloring of reads in IGV. Simply go to "Color Alignments By > Tag" and enter "HC" to more
easily see which reads go with these haplotype.
Note that the haplotypes (called or all, depending on mode) are emitted as single reads covering the entire
active region, coming from sample "HC" and a special read group called "ArtificialHaplotype". This will increase the
pileup depth compared to what would be expected from the reads only, especially in complex regions.
Note also that only reads that are actually informative about the haplotypes are emitted. By informative we mean
that there's a meaningful difference in the likelihood of the read coming from one haplotype compared to
its next best haplotype.
If multiple BAMs are passed as input to the tool (as is common for M2), then they will be combined in the bamout
output and tagged with the appropriate sample names.
The best way to visualize the output of this mode is with IGV. Tell IGV to color the alignments by tag,
and give it the "HC" tag, so you can see which reads support each haplotype. Finally, you can tell IGV
to group by sample, which will separate the potential haplotypes from the reads. All of this can be seen in
this screenshot
String null
--bam-writer-type
Which haplotypes should be written to the BAM
The type of BAM output we want to see. This determines whether HC will write out all of the haplotypes it
considered (top 128 max) or just the ones that were selected as alleles and assigned to samples.
The --bam-writer-type argument is an enumerated type (WriterType), which can have one of the following values:
- ALL_POSSIBLE_HAPLOTYPES
- A mode that's for method developers. Writes out all of the possible haplotypes considered, as well as reads aligned to each
- CALLED_HAPLOTYPES
- A mode for users. Writes out the reads aligned only to the called haplotypes. Useful to understand why the caller is calling what it is
- NO_HAPLOTYPES
- With this option, haplotypes will not be included in the output bam.
WriterType CALLED_HAPLOTYPES
--base-quality-score-threshold
Base qualities below this threshold will be reduced to the minimum (6)
Bases with a quality below this threshold will reduced to the minimum usable qualiy score (6).
byte 18 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--callable-depth
Minimum depth to be considered callable for Mutect stats. Does not affect genotyping.
int 10 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--cloud-index-prefetch-buffer / -CIPB
Size of the cloud-only prefetch buffer (in MB; 0 to disable). Defaults to cloudPrefetchBuffer if unset.
int -1 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--cloud-prefetch-buffer / -CPB
Size of the cloud-only prefetch buffer (in MB; 0 to disable).
int 40 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--create-output-bam-index / -OBI
If true, create a BAM/CRAM index when writing a coordinate-sorted BAM/CRAM file.
boolean true
--create-output-bam-md5 / -OBM
If true, create a MD5 digest for any BAM/SAM/CRAM file created
boolean false
--create-output-variant-index / -OVI
If true, create a VCF index when writing a coordinate-sorted VCF file.
boolean true
--create-output-variant-md5 / -OVM
If true, create a a MD5 digest any VCF file created.
boolean false
--debug-assembly / -debug
Print out verbose debug information about each assembly region
boolean false
--disable-adaptive-pruning
Disable the adaptive algorithm for pruning paths in the graph
A single edge multiplicity cutoff for pruning doesn't work in samples with variable depths, for example exomes
and RNA. This parameter disables the probabilistic algorithm for pruning the assembly graph that considers the
likelihood that each chain in the graph comes from real variation, and instead uses a simple multiplicity cutoff.
boolean false
--disable-bam-index-caching / -DBIC
If true, don't cache bam indexes, this will reduce memory requirements but may harm performance if many intervals are specified. Caching is automatically disabled if there are no intervals specified.
boolean false
--disable-cap-base-qualities-to-map-quality
If false this disables capping of base qualities in the HMM to the mapping quality of the read
boolean false
--disable-read-filter / -DF
Read filters to be disabled before analysis
List[String] []
--disable-sequence-dictionary-validation / -disable-sequence-dictionary-validation
If specified, do not check the sequence dictionaries from our inputs for compatibility. Use at your own risk!
boolean false
--disable-symmetric-hmm-normalizing
Toggle to revive legacy behavior of asymmetrically normalizing the arguments to the reference haplotype
boolean false
--disable-tool-default-annotations / -disable-tool-default-annotations
Disable all tool default annotations
Hook allowing for the user to remove default annotations from the tool
boolean false
--disable-tool-default-read-filters / -disable-tool-default-read-filters
Disable all tool default read filters (WARNING: many tools will not function correctly without their default read filters on)
boolean false
--dont-increase-kmer-sizes-for-cycles
Disable iterating over kmer sizes when graph cycles are detected
When graph cycles are detected, the normal behavior is to increase kmer sizes iteratively until the cycles are
resolved. Disabling this behavior may cause the program to give up on assembling the ActiveRegion.
boolean false
--dont-use-dragstr-pair-hmm-scores
disable DRAGstr pair-hmm score even when dragstr-params-path was provided
boolean false
--dont-use-soft-clipped-bases
Do not analyze soft clipped bases in the reads
boolean false
--downsampling-stride / -stride
Downsample a pool of reads starting within a range of one or more bases.
Downsample a pool of reads starting within a range of one or more bases.
int 1 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--dragstr-het-hom-ratio
het to hom prior ratio use with DRAGstr on
int 2 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--dragstr-params-path
location of the DRAGstr model parameters for STR error correction used in the Pair HMM. When provided, it overrides other PCR error correcting mechanisms
GATKPath null
--emit-ref-confidence / -ERC
Mode for emitting reference confidence scores (For Mutect2, this is a BETA feature)
The reference confidence mode makes it possible to emit a per-bp or summarized confidence estimate for a site being strictly homozygous-reference.
See https://software.broadinstitute.org/gatk/documentation/article.php?id=4017 for information about GVCFs.
For Mutect2, this is a BETA feature that functions similarly to the HaplotypeCaller reference confidence/GVCF mode.
The --emit-ref-confidence argument is an enumerated type (ReferenceConfidenceMode), which can have one of the following values:
- NONE
- Regular calling without emitting reference confidence calls.
- BP_RESOLUTION
- Reference model emitted site by site.
- GVCF
- Reference model emitted with condensed non-variant blocks, i.e. the GVCF format.
ReferenceConfidenceMode NONE
--enable-all-annotations
Use all possible annotations (not for the faint of heart)
You can use the -AX argument in combination with this one to exclude specific annotations. Note that some
annotations may not be actually applied if they are not applicable to the data provided or if they are
unavailable to the tool (e.g. there are several annotations that are currently not hooked up to
HaplotypeCaller). At present no error or warning message will be provided, the annotation will simply be
skipped silently. You can check the output VCF header to see which annotations were activated and thus might be applied (although
this does not guarantee that the annotation was applied to all records in the VCF, since some annotations have
additional requirements, e.g. minimum number of samples or heterozygous sites only -- see the documentation
for individual annotations' requirements).
boolean false
--enable-dynamic-read-disqualification-for-genotyping
Will enable less strict read disqualification low base quality reads
If enabled, rather than disqualifying all reads over a threshold of minimum hmm scores we will instead choose a less strict
and less aggressive cap for disqualification based on the read length and base qualities.
boolean false
--exclude-intervals / -XL
One or more genomic intervals to exclude from processing
Use this argument to exclude certain parts of the genome from the analysis (like -L, but the opposite).
This argument can be specified multiple times. You can use samtools-style intervals either explicitly on the
command line (e.g. -XL 1 or -XL 1:100-200) or by loading in a file containing a list of intervals
(e.g. -XL myFile.intervals).
List[String] []
--expected-mismatch-rate-for-read-disqualification
Error rate used to set expectation for post HMM read disqualification based on mismatches
double 0.02 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--f1r2-max-depth
sites with depth higher than this value will be grouped
int 200 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--f1r2-median-mq
skip sites with median mapping quality below this value
int 50 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--f1r2-min-bq
exclude bases below this quality from pileup
int 20 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--f1r2-tar-gz
If specified, collect F1R2 counts and output files into this tar.gz file
File null
--force-active
If provided, all regions will be marked as active
boolean false
--force-call-filtered-alleles / -genotype-filtered-alleles
Force-call filtered alleles included in the resource specified by --alleles
boolean false
--founder-id / -founder-id
Samples representing the population "founders"
List[String] []
--gatk-config-file
A configuration file to use with the GATK.
String null
--gcs-max-retries / -gcs-retries
If the GCS bucket channel errors out, how many times it will attempt to re-initiate the connection
int 20 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--gcs-project-for-requester-pays
Project to bill when accessing "requester pays" buckets. If unset, these buckets cannot be accessed. User must have storage.buckets.get permission on the bucket being accessed.
String ""
--genotype-germline-sites
(EXPERIMENTAL) Call all apparent germline site even though they will ultimately be filtered.
Usually we exclude sites in the panel of normals from active region determination, which saves time. Setting this to true
causes Mutect to produce a variant call at these sites. This call will still be filtered, but it shows up in the vcf.
boolean false
--genotype-pon-sites
Call sites in the PoN even though they will ultimately be filtered.
Usually we exclude sites in the panel of normals from active region determination, which saves time. Setting this to true
causes Mutect to produce a variant call at these sites. This call will still be filtered, but it shows up in the vcf.
boolean false
--germline-resource
Population vcf of germline sequencing containing allele fractions.
A resource, such as gnomAD, containing population allele frequencies of common and rare variants.
FeatureInput[VariantContext] null
--graph-output / -graph
Write debug assembly graph information to this file
This argument is meant for debugging and is not immediately useful for normal analysis use.
String null
--gvcf-lod-band / -LODB
Exclusive upper bounds for reference confidence LOD bands (must be specified in increasing order)
When Mutect2 is run in reference confidence mode with banding compression enabled (-ERC GVCF), homozygous-reference
sites are compressed into bands of similar tumor LOD (TLOD) that are emitted as a single VCF record. See
the FAQ documentation for more details about the GVCF format.
This argument allows you to set the TLOD bands. Mutect2 expects a list of strictly increasing TLOD values that will act as exclusive upper bounds for the TLOD bands. To pass multiple values, you provide them one by one with the argument, as in `-LODB -3.0 -LODB -2.0 -LODB -1.0` (this would set the TLOD bands to be `[-Inf, -3.0), [-3.0, -2.0), [-2.0, -1.0), [-1.0, Inf]`, for example).
Note that, unlike the GQ used by HaplotypeCaller GVCFs, here the reference calls with the highest confidence are the most negative.
List[Double] [-2.5, -2.0, -1.5, -1.0, -0.5, 0.0, 0.5, 1.0]
--help / -h
display the help message
boolean false
--ignore-itr-artifacts
Turn off read transformer that clips artifacts associated with end repair insertions near inverted tandem repeats.
When opposite ends of a fragment are inverted tandem repeats of each other, the sequence past one end may be copied onto the other
during library prep. By default, Mutect2 identifies and clips these artifacts, which are especially prevalent when
DNA is damaged as in the case of FFPE samples and ancient DNA.
boolean false
--independent-mates
Allow paired reads to independently support different haplotypes. Useful for validations with ill-designed synthetic data.
boolean false
--initial-tumor-lod / -init-lod
Log 10 odds threshold to consider pileup active.
Only variants with estimated tumor LODs exceeding this threshold will be considered active.
double 2.0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--input / -I
BAM/SAM/CRAM file containing reads
R List[GATKPath] []
--interval-exclusion-padding / -ixp
Amount of padding (in bp) to add to each interval you are excluding.
Use this to add padding to the intervals specified using -XL. For example, '-XL 1:100' with a
padding value of 20 would turn into '-XL 1:80-120'. This is typically used to add padding around targets when
analyzing exomes.
int 0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--interval-merging-rule / -imr
Interval merging rule for abutting intervals
By default, the program merges abutting intervals (i.e. intervals that are directly side-by-side but do not
actually overlap) into a single continuous interval. However you can change this behavior if you want them to be
treated as separate intervals instead.
The --interval-merging-rule argument is an enumerated type (IntervalMergingRule), which can have one of the following values:
- ALL
- OVERLAPPING_ONLY
IntervalMergingRule ALL
--interval-padding / -ip
Amount of padding (in bp) to add to each interval you are including.
Use this to add padding to the intervals specified using -L. For example, '-L 1:100' with a
padding value of 20 would turn into '-L 1:80-120'. This is typically used to add padding around targets when
analyzing exomes.
int 0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--interval-set-rule / -isr
Set merging approach to use for combining interval inputs
By default, the program will take the UNION of all intervals specified using -L and/or -XL. However, you can
change this setting for -L, for example if you want to take the INTERSECTION of the sets instead. E.g. to
perform the analysis only on chromosome 1 exomes, you could specify -L exomes.intervals -L 1 --interval-set-rule
INTERSECTION. However, it is not possible to modify the merging approach for intervals passed using -XL (they will
always be merged using UNION).
Note that if you specify both -L and -XL, the -XL interval set will be subtracted from the -L interval set.
The --interval-set-rule argument is an enumerated type (IntervalSetRule), which can have one of the following values:
- UNION
- Take the union of all intervals
- INTERSECTION
- Take the intersection of intervals (the subset that overlaps all intervals specified)
IntervalSetRule UNION
--intervals / -L
One or more genomic intervals over which to operate
List[String] []
--kmer-size
Kmer size to use in the read threading assembler
Multiple kmer sizes can be specified, using e.g. `--kmer-size 10 --kmer-size 25`.
List[Integer] [10, 25]
--lenient / -LE
Lenient processing of VCF files
boolean false
--linked-de-bruijn-graph
If enabled, the Assembly Engine will construct a Linked De Bruijn graph to recover better haplotypes
Disables graph simplification into a seq graph, opts to construct a proper De Bruijn graph with potential loops
NOTE: --linked-de-bruijn-graph is currently an experimental feature that does not directly match with
the regular HaplotypeCaller. Specifically the haplotype finding code does not perform correctly at complicated
sites. Use this mode at your own risk.
boolean false
--max-assembly-region-size
Maximum size of an assembly region
int 300 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-mnp-distance / -mnp-dist
Two or more phased substitutions separated by this distance or less are merged into MNPs.
Two or more phased substitutions separated by this distance or less are merged into MNPs.
int 1 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-num-haplotypes-in-population
Maximum number of haplotypes to consider for your population
The assembly graph can be quite complex, and could imply a very large number of possible haplotypes. Each haplotype
considered requires N PairHMM evaluations if there are N reads across all samples. In order to control the
run of the haplotype caller we only take maxNumHaplotypesInPopulation paths from the graph, in order of their
weights, no matter how many paths are possible to generate from the graph. Putting this number too low
will result in dropping true variation because paths that include the real variant are not even considered.
You can consider increasing this number when calling organisms with high heterozygosity.
int 128 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-population-af / -max-af
Maximum population allele frequency in tumor-only mode.
In tumor-only mode, we discard variants with population allele frequencies greater than this threshold.
double 0.01 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-prob-propagation-distance
Upper limit on how many bases away probability mass can be moved around when calculating the boundaries between active and inactive assembly regions
int 50 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-reads-per-alignment-start
Maximum number of reads to retain per alignment start position. Reads above this threshold will be downsampled. Set to 0 to disable.
Other parameters
int 50 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-suspicious-reads-per-alignment-start
Maximum number of suspicious reads (mediocre mapping quality or too many substitutions) allowed in a downsampling stride. Set to 0 to disable.
Maximum number of suspicious reads (mediocre mapping quality or too many substitutions) allowed in a downsampling stride.
int 0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--max-unpruned-variants
Maximum number of variants in graph the adaptive pruner will allow
The maximum number of variants in graph the adaptive pruner will allow
int 100 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--min-assembly-region-size
Minimum size of an assembly region
Parameters that control active regions
int 50 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--min-base-quality-score / -mbq
Minimum base quality required to consider a base for calling
Bases with a quality below this threshold will not be used for calling.
byte 10 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--min-dangling-branch-length
Minimum length of a dangling branch to attempt recovery
When constructing the assembly graph we are often left with "dangling" branches. The assembly engine attempts to rescue these branches
by merging them back into the main graph. This argument describes the minimum length of a dangling branch needed for the engine to
try to rescue it. A smaller number here will lead to higher sensitivity to real variation but also to a higher number of false positives.
int 4 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--min-pruning
Minimum support to not prune paths in the graph
Paths with fewer supporting kmers than the specified threshold will be pruned from the graph.
Be aware that this argument can dramatically affect the results of variant calling and should only be used with great caution.
Using a prune factor of 1 (or below) will prevent any pruning from the graph, which is generally not ideal; it can make the
calling much slower and even less accurate (because it can prevent effective merging of "tails" in the graph). Higher values
tend to make the calling much faster, but also lowers the sensitivity of the results (because it ultimately requires higher
depth to produce calls).
int 2 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--minimum-allele-fraction / -min-AF
Lower bound of variant allele fractions to consider when calculating variant LOD
double 0.0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--mitochondria-mode
Mitochondria mode sets emission and initial LODs to 0.
Mitochondria mode changes default values for --tumor-lod-to-emit and --initial-tumor-lod to 0 to increase sensitivity.
--tumor-sample is also not explicitly required in mitochondria mode since a single sample bam is expected as input.
Mitochondria mode is also required in FilterMutectCalls if used here.
Boolean false
--native-pair-hmm-threads
How many threads should a native pairHMM implementation use
int 4 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--native-pair-hmm-use-double-precision
use double precision in the native pairHmm. This is slower but matches the java implementation better
boolean false
--normal-lod
Log 10 odds threshold for calling normal variant non-germline.
This is a measure of the minimum evidence to support that a variant observed in the tumor is not also present in the normal.
Applies to normal data in a tumor with matched normal analysis. The default has been tuned for diploid somatic analyses.
It is unlikely such analyses will require changing the default value. Increasing the parameter may increase the sensitivity of somatic calling,
but may also increase calling false positive, i.e. germline, variants.
double 2.2 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--normal-sample / -normal
BAM sample name of normal(s), if any. May be URL-encoded as output by GetSampleName with -encode argument.
List[String] []
--num-pruning-samples
Number of samples that must pass the minPruning threshold
If fewer samples than the specified number pass the minPruning threshold for a given path, that path will be eliminated from the graph.
int 1 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--output / -O
File to which variants should be written
R GATKPath null
--pair-hmm-gap-continuation-penalty
Flat gap continuation penalty for use in the Pair HMM
int 10 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--pair-hmm-implementation / -pairHMM
The PairHMM implementation to use for genotype likelihood calculations
The PairHMM implementation to use for genotype likelihood calculations. The various implementations balance a tradeoff of accuracy and runtime.
The --pair-hmm-implementation argument is an enumerated type (Implementation), which can have one of the following values:
- EXACT
- ORIGINAL
- LOGLESS_CACHING
- AVX_LOGLESS_CACHING
- AVX_LOGLESS_CACHING_OMP
- EXPERIMENTAL_FPGA_LOGLESS_CACHING
- FASTEST_AVAILABLE
Implementation FASTEST_AVAILABLE
--panel-of-normals / -pon
VCF file of sites observed in normal.
A panel of normals can be a useful (optional) input to help filter out commonly seen sequencing noise that may appear as low allele-fraction somatic variants.
FeatureInput[VariantContext] null
--pcr-indel-model
The PCR indel model to use
When calculating the likelihood of variants, we can try to correct for PCR errors that cause indel artifacts.
The correction is based on the reference context, and acts specifically around repetitive sequences that tend
to cause PCR errors). The variant likelihoods are penalized in increasing scale as the context around a
putative indel is more repetitive (e.g. long homopolymer). The correction can be disabling by specifying
'-pcrModel NONE'; in that case the default base insertion/deletion qualities will be used (or taken from the
read if generated through the BaseRecalibrator). VERY IMPORTANT: when using PCR-free sequencing data we
definitely recommend setting this argument to NONE.
The --pcr-indel-model argument is an enumerated type (PCRErrorModel), which can have one of the following values:
- NONE
- no specialized PCR error model will be applied; if base insertion/deletion qualities are present they will be used
- HOSTILE
- a most aggressive model will be applied that sacrifices true positives in order to remove more false positives
- AGGRESSIVE
- a more aggressive model will be applied that sacrifices true positives in order to remove more false positives
- CONSERVATIVE
- a less aggressive model will be applied that tries to maintain a high true positive rate at the expense of allowing more false positives
PCRErrorModel CONSERVATIVE
--pcr-indel-qual
Phred-scaled PCR indel qual for overlapping fragments
int 40 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--pcr-snv-qual
Phred-scaled PCR SNV qual for overlapping fragments
int 40 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--pedigree / -ped
Pedigree file for determining the population "founders"
GATKPath null
--phred-scaled-global-read-mismapping-rate
The global assumed mismapping rate for reads
The phredScaledGlobalReadMismappingRate reflects the average global mismapping rate of all reads, regardless of their
mapping quality. This term effects the probability that a read originated from the reference haplotype, regardless of
its edit distance from the reference, in that the read could have originated from the reference haplotype but
from another location in the genome. Suppose a read has many mismatches from the reference, say like 5, but
has a very high mapping quality of 60. Without this parameter, the read would contribute 5 * Q30 evidence
in favor of its 5 mismatch haplotype compared to reference, potentially enough to make a call off that single
read for all of these events. With this parameter set to Q30, though, the maximum evidence against any haplotype
that this (and any) read could contribute is Q30.
Set this term to any negative number to turn off the global mapping rate.
int 45 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--pruning-lod-threshold
Ln likelihood ratio threshold for adaptive pruning algorithm
Log-10 likelihood ratio threshold for adaptive pruning algorithm.
double 2.302585092994046 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--pruning-seeding-lod-threshold
Ln likelihood ratio threshold for seeding subgraph of good variation in adaptive pruning algorithm
Log-10 likelihood ratio threshold for adaptive pruning algorithm.
double 9.210340371976184 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--QUIET
Whether to suppress job-summary info on System.err.
Boolean false
--read-filter / -RF
Read filters to be applied before analysis
List[String] []
--read-index / -read-index
Indices to use for the read inputs. If specified, an index must be provided for every read input and in the same order as the read inputs. If this argument is not specified, the path to the index for each input will be inferred automatically.
List[GATKPath] []
--read-validation-stringency / -VS
Validation stringency for all SAM/BAM/CRAM/SRA files read by this program. The default stringency value SILENT can improve performance when processing a BAM file in which variable-length data (read, qualities, tags) do not otherwise need to be decoded.
The --read-validation-stringency argument is an enumerated type (ValidationStringency), which can have one of the following values:
- STRICT
- LENIENT
- SILENT
ValidationStringency SILENT
--recover-all-dangling-branches
Recover all dangling branches
By default, the read threading assembler does not recover dangling branches that fork after splitting from the reference. This argument
tells the assembly engine to recover all dangling branches.
boolean false
--reference / -R
Reference sequence file
R GATKPath null
--seconds-between-progress-updates / -seconds-between-progress-updates
Output traversal statistics every time this many seconds elapse
double 10.0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--sequence-dictionary / -sequence-dictionary
Use the given sequence dictionary as the master/canonical sequence dictionary. Must be a .dict file.
GATKPath null
--showHidden / -showHidden
display hidden arguments
boolean false
--sites-only-vcf-output
If true, don't emit genotype fields when writing vcf file output.
boolean false
--smith-waterman
Which Smith-Waterman implementation to use, generally FASTEST_AVAILABLE is the right choice
The --smith-waterman argument is an enumerated type (Implementation), which can have one of the following values:
- FASTEST_AVAILABLE
- use the fastest available Smith-Waterman aligner that runs on your hardware
- AVX_ENABLED
- use the AVX enabled Smith-Waterman aligner
- JAVA
- use the pure java implementation of Smith-Waterman, works on all hardware
Implementation JAVA
--soft-clip-low-quality-ends
If enabled will preserve low-quality read ends as softclips (used for DRAGEN-GATK BQD genotyper model)
boolean false
--tmp-dir
Temp directory to use.
GATKPath null
--tumor-lod-to-emit / -emit-lod
Log 10 odds threshold to emit variant to VCF.
Only variants with tumor LODs exceeding this threshold will be written to the VCF, regardless of filter status.
Set to less than or equal to tumor_lod. Increase argument value to reduce false positives in the callset.
Default setting of 3 is permissive and will emit some amount of negative training data that
{@link FilterMutectCalls} should then filter.
double 3.0 [ [ -∞ ∞ ] ]
--tumor-sample / -tumor
BAM sample name of tumor. May be URL-encoded as output by GetSampleName with -encode argument.
String null
--use-jdk-deflater / -jdk-deflater
Whether to use the JdkDeflater (as opposed to IntelDeflater)
boolean false
--use-jdk-inflater / -jdk-inflater
Whether to use the JdkInflater (as opposed to IntelInflater)
boolean false
--verbosity / -verbosity
Control verbosity of logging.
The --verbosity argument is an enumerated type (LogLevel), which can have one of the following values:
- ERROR
- WARNING
- INFO
- DEBUG
LogLevel INFO
--version
display the version number for this tool
boolean false
GATK version 4.2.0.0-SNAPSHOT built at Mon, 22 Feb 2021 13:44:49 -0800.
1 comment
Hi, I run mutect with two parameters `--genotype-germline-sites true --genotype-pon-sites true ` to preserve germline sites, but in the output vcf file, the genotypes(GT) of the normal samples are all 0/0. Why?
Please sign in to leave a comment.