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MANUAL
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Introduction
============
What is HISAT2?
-----------------
HISAT2 is a fast and sensitive alignment program for mapping next-generation sequencing reads
(whole-genome, transcriptome, and exome sequencing data) against the general human population
(as well as against a single reference genome). Based on [GCSA] (an extension of [BWT] for a graph), we designed and implemented a graph FM index (GFM),
an original approach and its first implementation to the best of our knowledge.
In addition to using one global GFM index that represents general population,
HISAT2 uses a large set of small GFM indexes that collectively cover the whole genome
(each index representing a genomic region of 56 Kbp, with 55,000 indexes needed to cover human population).
These small indexes (called local indexes) combined with several alignment strategies enable effective alignment of sequencing reads.
This new indexing scheme is called Hierarchical Graph FM index (HGFM).
We have developed HISAT 2 based on the [HISAT] and [Bowtie2] implementations.
HISAT2 outputs alignments in [SAM] format, enabling interoperation with a large number of other tools (e.g. [SAMtools], [GATK]) that use SAM.
HISAT2 is distributed under the [GPLv3 license], and it runs on the command line under
Linux, Mac OS X and Windows.
[HISAT2]: http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat2
[HISAT]: http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat
[Bowtie2]: http://bowtie-bio.sf.net/bowtie2
[Bowtie]: http://bowtie-bio.sf.net
[Bowtie1]: http://bowtie-bio.sf.net
[GCSA]: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=6698337&tag=1
[Burrows-Wheeler Transform]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burrows-Wheeler_transform
[BWT]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burrows-Wheeler_transform
[FM Index]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FM-index
[SAM]: http://samtools.sourceforge.net/SAM1.pdf
[SAMtools]: http://samtools.sourceforge.net
[GATK]: http://www.broadinstitute.org/gsa/wiki/index.php/The_Genome_Analysis_Toolkit
[TopHat2]: http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/tophat
[Cufflinks]: http://cufflinks.cbcb.umd.edu/
[Crossbow]: http://bowtie-bio.sf.net/crossbow
[Myrna]: http://bowtie-bio.sf.net/myrna
[Bowtie paper]: http://genomebiology.com/2009/10/3/R25
[GPLv3 license]: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html
Obtaining HISAT2
==================
Download HISAT2 sources and binaries from the Releases sections on the right side.
Binaries are available for Intel architectures (`x86_64`) running Linux, and Mac OS X.
Building from source
--------------------
Building HISAT2 from source requires a GNU-like environment with GCC, GNU Make
and other basics. It should be possible to build HISAT2 on most vanilla Linux
installations or on a Mac installation with [Xcode] installed. HISAT2 can
also be built on Windows using [Cygwin] or [MinGW] (MinGW recommended). For a
MinGW build the choice of what compiler is to be used is important since this
will determine if a 32 or 64 bit code can be successfully compiled using it. If
there is a need to generate both 32 and 64 bit on the same machine then a multilib
MinGW has to be properly installed. [MSYS], the [zlib] library, and depending on
architecture [pthreads] library are also required. We are recommending a 64 bit
build since it has some clear advantages in real life research problems. In order
to simplify the MinGW setup it might be worth investigating popular MinGW personal
builds since these are coming already prepared with most of the toolchains needed.
First, download the [source package] from the Releases section on the right side.
Unzip the file, change to the unzipped directory, and build the
HISAT2 tools by running GNU `make` (usually with the command `make`, but
sometimes with `gmake`) with no arguments. If building with MinGW, run `make`
from the MSYS environment.
HISAT2 is using the multithreading software model in order to speed up
execution times on SMP architectures where this is possible. On POSIX
platforms (like linux, Mac OS, etc) it needs the pthread library. Although
it is possible to use pthread library on non-POSIX platform like Windows, due
to performance reasons HISAT2 will try to use Windows native multithreading
if possible.
For the support of SRA data access in HISAT2, please download and install the [NCBI-NGS] toolkit.
When running `make`, specify additional variables as follow.
`make USE_SRA=1 NCBI_NGS_DIR=/path/to/NCBI-NGS-directory NCBI_VDB_DIR=/path/to/NCBI-NGS-directory`,
where `NCBI_NGS_DIR` and `NCBI_VDB_DIR` will be used in Makefile for -I and -L compilation options.
For example, $(NCBI_NGS_DIR)/include and $(NCBI_NGS_DIR)/lib64 will be used.
[Cygwin]: http://www.cygwin.com/
[MinGW]: http://www.mingw.org/
[MSYS]: http://www.mingw.org/wiki/msys
[zlib]: http://cygwin.com/packages/mingw-zlib/
[pthreads]: http://sourceware.org/pthreads-win32/
[GnuWin32]: http://gnuwin32.sf.net/packages/coreutils.htm
[Download]: https://sourceforge.net/projects/bowtie-bio/files/bowtie2/
[sourceforge site]: https://sourceforge.net/projects/bowtie-bio/files/bowtie2/
[source package]: http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat2/downloads/hisat2-2.0.0-beta-source.zip
[Xcode]: http://developer.apple.com/xcode/
[NCBI-NGS]: https://github.com/ncbi/ngs/wiki/Downloads
Running HISAT2
=============
Adding to PATH
--------------
By adding your new HISAT2 directory to your [PATH environment variable], you
ensure that whenever you run `hisat2`, `hisat2-build` or `hisat2-inspect`
from the command line, you will get the version you just installed without
having to specify the entire path. This is recommended for most users. To do
this, follow your operating system's instructions for adding the directory to
your [PATH].
If you would like to install HISAT2 by copying the HISAT2 executable files
to an existing directory in your [PATH], make sure that you copy all the
executables, including `hisat2`, `hisat2-align-s`, `hisat2-align-l`, `hisat2-build`, `hisat2-build-s`, `hisat2-build-l`, `hisat2-inspect`, `hisat2-inspect-s` and
`hisat2-inspect-l`.
[PATH environment variable]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PATH_(variable)
[PATH]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PATH_(variable)
Reporting
---------
The reporting mode governs how many alignments HISAT2 looks for, and how to
report them.
In general, when we say that a read has an alignment, we mean that it has a
[valid alignment]. When we say that a read has multiple alignments, we mean
that it has multiple alignments that are valid and distinct from one another.
By default, HISAT2 may soft-clip reads near their 5' and 3' ends. Users can control this behavior by setting different penalties for soft-clipping (`--sp`) or by disallowing soft-clipping (`--no-softclip`).
### Distinct alignments map a read to different places
Two alignments for the same individual read are "distinct" if they map the same
read to different places. Specifically, we say that two alignments are distinct
if there are no alignment positions where a particular read offset is aligned
opposite a particular reference offset in both alignments with the same
orientation. E.g. if the first alignment is in the forward orientation and
aligns the read character at read offset 10 to the reference character at
chromosome 3, offset 3,445,245, and the second alignment is also in the forward
orientation and also aligns the read character at read offset 10 to the
reference character at chromosome 3, offset 3,445,245, they are not distinct
alignments.
Two alignments for the same pair are distinct if either the mate 1s in the two
paired-end alignments are distinct or the mate 2s in the two alignments are
distinct or both.
### Default mode: search for one or more alignments, report each
HISAT2 searches for up to N distinct, primary alignments for
each read, where N equals the integer specified with the `-k` parameter.
Primary alignments mean alignments whose alignment score is equal or higher than any other alignments.
It is possible that multiple distinct alignments have the same score.
That is, if `-k 2` is specified, HISAT2 will search for at most 2 distinct
alignments. The alignment score for a paired-end alignment equals the sum of the
alignment scores of the individual mates. Each reported read or pair alignment
beyond the first has the SAM 'secondary' bit (which equals 256) set in its FLAGS
field. See the [SAM specification] for details.
HISAT2 does not "find" alignments in any specific order, so for reads that
have more than N distinct, valid alignments, HISAT2 does not guarantee that
the N alignments reported are the best possible in terms of alignment score.
Still, this mode can be effective and fast in situations where the user cares
more about whether a read aligns (or aligns a certain number of times) than
where exactly it originated.
[SAM specification]: http://samtools.sourceforge.net/SAM1.pdf
Alignment summary
------------------
When HISAT2 finishes running, it prints messages summarizing what happened.
These messages are printed to the "standard error" ("stderr") filehandle. For
datasets consisting of unpaired reads, the summary might look like this:
20000 reads; of these:
20000 (100.00%) were unpaired; of these:
1247 (6.24%) aligned 0 times
18739 (93.69%) aligned exactly 1 time
14 (0.07%) aligned >1 times
93.77% overall alignment rate
For datasets consisting of pairs, the summary might look like this:
10000 reads; of these:
10000 (100.00%) were paired; of these:
650 (6.50%) aligned concordantly 0 times
8823 (88.23%) aligned concordantly exactly 1 time
527 (5.27%) aligned concordantly >1 times
----
650 pairs aligned concordantly 0 times; of these:
34 (5.23%) aligned discordantly 1 time
----
616 pairs aligned 0 times concordantly or discordantly; of these:
1232 mates make up the pairs; of these:
660 (53.57%) aligned 0 times
571 (46.35%) aligned exactly 1 time
1 (0.08%) aligned >1 times
96.70% overall alignment rate
The indentation indicates how subtotals relate to totals.
Wrapper
-------
The `hisat2`, `hisat2-build` and `hisat2-inspect` executables are actually
wrapper scripts that call binary programs as appropriate. The wrappers shield
users from having to distinguish between "small" and "large" index formats,
discussed briefly in the following section. Also, the `hisat2` wrapper
provides some key functionality, like the ability to handle compressed inputs,
and the functionality for `--un`, `--al` and related options.
It is recommended that you always run the hisat2 wrappers and not run the
binaries directly.
Small and large indexes
-----------------------
`hisat2-build` can index reference genomes of any size. For genomes less than
about 4 billion nucleotides in length, `hisat2-build` builds a "small" index
using 32-bit numbers in various parts of the index. When the genome is longer,
`hisat2-build` builds a "large" index using 64-bit numbers. Small indexes are
stored in files with the `.ht2` extension, and large indexes are stored in
files with the `.ht2l` extension. The user need not worry about whether a
particular index is small or large; the wrapper scripts will automatically build
and use the appropriate index.
Performance tuning
------------------
1. If your computer has multiple processors/cores, use `-p`
The `-p` option causes HISAT2 to launch a specified number of parallel
search threads. Each thread runs on a different processor/core and all
threads find alignments in parallel, increasing alignment throughput by
approximately a multiple of the number of threads (though in practice,
speedup is somewhat worse than linear).
Command Line
------------
### Setting function options
Some HISAT2 options specify a function rather than an individual number or
setting. In these cases the user specifies three parameters: (a) a function
type `F`, (b) a constant term `B`, and (c) a coefficient `A`. The available
function types are constant (`C`), linear (`L`), square-root (`S`), and natural
log (`G`). The parameters are specified as `F,B,A` - that is, the function type,
the constant term, and the coefficient are separated by commas with no
whitespace. The constant term and coefficient may be negative and/or
floating-point numbers.
For example, if the function specification is `L,-0.4,-0.6`, then the function
defined is:
f(x) = -0.4 + -0.6 * x
If the function specification is `G,1,5.4`, then the function defined is:
f(x) = 1.0 + 5.4 * ln(x)
See the documentation for the option in question to learn what the parameter `x`
is for. For example, in the case if the `--score-min` option, the function
`f(x)` sets the minimum alignment score necessary for an alignment to be
considered valid, and `x` is the read length.
### Usage
hisat2 [options]* -x <hisat2-idx> {-1 <m1> -2 <m2> | -U <r> | --sra-acc <SRA accession number>} [-S <hit>]
### Main arguments
-x <hisat2-idx>
The basename of the index for the reference genome. The basename is the name of
any of the index files up to but not including the final `.1.ht2` / etc.
`hisat2` looks for the specified index first in the current directory,
then in the directory specified in the `HISAT2_INDEXES` environment variable.
-1 <m1>
Comma-separated list of files containing mate 1s (filename usually includes
`_1`), e.g. `-1 flyA_1.fq,flyB_1.fq`. Sequences specified with this option must
correspond file-for-file and read-for-read with those specified in `<m2>`. Reads
may be a mix of different lengths. If `-` is specified, `hisat2` will read the
mate 1s from the "standard in" or "stdin" filehandle.
-2 <m2>
Comma-separated list of files containing mate 2s (filename usually includes
`_2`), e.g. `-2 flyA_2.fq,flyB_2.fq`. Sequences specified with this option must
correspond file-for-file and read-for-read with those specified in `<m1>`. Reads
may be a mix of different lengths. If `-` is specified, `hisat2` will read the
mate 2s from the "standard in" or "stdin" filehandle.
-U <r>
Comma-separated list of files containing unpaired reads to be aligned, e.g.
`lane1.fq,lane2.fq,lane3.fq,lane4.fq`. Reads may be a mix of different lengths.
If `-` is specified, `hisat2` gets the reads from the "standard in" or "stdin"
filehandle.
--sra-acc <SRA accession number>
Comma-separated list of SRA accession numbers, e.g. `--sra-acc SRR353653,SRR353654`.
Information about read types is available at http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?sp=runinfo&acc=<b>sra-acc</b>&retmode=xml,
where <b>sra-acc</b> is SRA accession number. If users run HISAT2 on a computer cluster, it is recommended to disable SRA-related caching (see the instruction at [SRA-MANUAL]).
[SRA-MANUAL]: https://github.com/ncbi/sra-tools/wiki/Toolkit-Configuration
-S <hit>
File to write SAM alignments to. By default, alignments are written to the
"standard out" or "stdout" filehandle (i.e. the console).
### Options
#### Input options
-q
Reads (specified with `<m1>`, `<m2>`, `<s>`) are FASTQ files. FASTQ files
usually have extension `.fq` or `.fastq`. FASTQ is the default format. See
also: `--solexa-quals` and `--int-quals`.
--qseq
Reads (specified with `<m1>`, `<m2>`, `<s>`) are QSEQ files. QSEQ files usually
end in `_qseq.txt`. See also: `--solexa-quals` and `--int-quals`.
-f
Reads (specified with `<m1>`, `<m2>`, `<s>`) are FASTA files. FASTA files
usually have extension `.fa`, `.fasta`, `.mfa`, `.fna` or similar. FASTA files
do not have a way of specifying quality values, so when `-f` is set, the result
is as if `--ignore-quals` is also set.
-r
Reads (specified with `<m1>`, `<m2>`, `<s>`) are files with one input sequence
per line, without any other information (no read names, no qualities). When
`-r` is set, the result is as if `--ignore-quals` is also set.
-c
The read sequences are given on command line. I.e. `<m1>`, `<m2>` and
`<singles>` are comma-separated lists of reads rather than lists of read files.
There is no way to specify read names or qualities, so `-c` also implies
`--ignore-quals`.
-s/--skip <int>
Skip (i.e. do not align) the first `<int>` reads or pairs in the input.
-u/--qupto <int>
Align the first `<int>` reads or read pairs from the input (after the
`-s`/`--skip` reads or pairs have been skipped), then stop. Default: no limit.
-5/--trim5 <int>
Trim `<int>` bases from 5' (left) end of each read before alignment (default: 0).
-3/--trim3 <int>
Trim `<int>` bases from 3' (right) end of each read before alignment (default:
0).
--phred33
Input qualities are ASCII chars equal to the [Phred quality] plus 33. This is
also called the "Phred+33" encoding, which is used by the very latest Illumina
pipelines.
[Phred quality]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phred_quality_score
--phred64
Input qualities are ASCII chars equal to the [Phred quality] plus 64. This is
also called the "Phred+64" encoding.
--solexa-quals
Convert input qualities from [Solexa][Phred quality] (which can be negative) to
[Phred][Phred quality] (which can't). This scheme was used in older Illumina GA
Pipeline versions (prior to 1.3). Default: off.
--int-quals
Quality values are represented in the read input file as space-separated ASCII
integers, e.g., `40 40 30 40`..., rather than ASCII characters, e.g., `II?I`....
Integers are treated as being on the [Phred quality] scale unless
`--solexa-quals` is also specified. Default: off.
#### Alignment options
--n-ceil <func>
Sets a function governing the maximum number of ambiguous characters (usually
`N`s and/or `.`s) allowed in a read as a function of read length. For instance,
specifying `-L,0,0.15` sets the N-ceiling function `f` to `f(x) = 0 + 0.15 * x`,
where x is the read length. See also: [setting function options]. Reads
exceeding this ceiling are [filtered out]. Default: `L,0,0.15`.
--ignore-quals
When calculating a mismatch penalty, always consider the quality value at the
mismatched position to be the highest possible, regardless of the actual value.
I.e. input is treated as though all quality values are high. This is also the
default behavior when the input doesn't specify quality values (e.g. in `-f`,
`-r`, or `-c` modes).
--nofw/--norc
If `--nofw` is specified, `hisat2` will not attempt to align unpaired reads to
the forward (Watson) reference strand. If `--norc` is specified, `hisat2` will
not attempt to align unpaired reads against the reverse-complement (Crick)
reference strand. In paired-end mode, `--nofw` and `--norc` pertain to the
fragments; i.e. specifying `--nofw` causes `hisat2` to explore only those
paired-end configurations corresponding to fragments from the reverse-complement
(Crick) strand. Default: both strands enabled.
#### Scoring options
--mp MX,MN
Sets the maximum (`MX`) and minimum (`MN`) mismatch penalties, both integers. A
number less than or equal to `MX` and greater than or equal to `MN` is
subtracted from the alignment score for each position where a read character
aligns to a reference character, the characters do not match, and neither is an
`N`. If `--ignore-quals` is specified, the number subtracted quals `MX`.
Otherwise, the number subtracted is `MN + floor( (MX-MN)(MIN(Q, 40.0)/40.0) )`
where Q is the Phred quality value. Default: `MX` = 6, `MN` = 2.
--sp MX,MN
Sets the maximum (`MX`) and minimum (`MN`) penalties for soft-clipping per base,
both integers. A number less than or equal to `MX` and greater than or equal to `MN` is
subtracted from the alignment score for each position.
The number subtracted is `MN + floor( (MX-MN)(MIN(Q, 40.0)/40.0) )`
where Q is the Phred quality value. Default: `MX` = 2, `MN` = 1.
--no-softclip
Disallow soft-clipping.
--np <int>
Sets penalty for positions where the read, reference, or both, contain an
ambiguous character such as `N`. Default: 1.
--rdg <int1>,<int2>
Sets the read gap open (`<int1>`) and extend (`<int2>`) penalties. A read gap of
length N gets a penalty of `<int1>` + N * `<int2>`. Default: 5, 3.
--rfg <int1>,<int2>
Sets the reference gap open (`<int1>`) and extend (`<int2>`) penalties. A
reference gap of length N gets a penalty of `<int1>` + N * `<int2>`. Default:
5, 3.
--score-min <func>
Sets a function governing the minimum alignment score needed for an alignment to
be considered "valid" (i.e. good enough to report). This is a function of read
length. For instance, specifying `L,0,-0.6` sets the minimum-score function `f`
to `f(x) = 0 + -0.6 * x`, where `x` is the read length. See also: [setting
function options]. The default is `L,0,-0.2`.
#### Spliced alignment options
--pen-cansplice <int>
Sets the penalty for each pair of canonical splice sites (e.g. GT/AG). Default: 0.
--pen-noncansplice <int>
Sets the penalty for each pair of non-canonical splice sites (e.g. non-GT/AG). Default: 12.
--pen-canintronlen <func>
Sets the penalty for long introns with canonical splice sites so that alignments with shorter introns are preferred
to those with longer ones. Default: G,-8,1
--pen-noncanintronlen <func>
Sets the penalty for long introns with noncanonical splice sites so that alignments with shorter introns are preferred
to those with longer ones. Default: G,-8,1
--min-intronlen <int>
Sets minimum intron length. Default: 20
--max-intronlen <int>
Sets maximum intron length. Default: 500000
--known-splicesite-infile <path>
With this mode, you can provide a list of known splice sites, which HISAT2 makes use of to align reads with small anchors.
You can create such a list using `python hisat2_extract_splice_sites.py genes.gtf > splicesites.txt`,
where `hisat2_extract_splice_sites.py` is included in the HISAT2 package, `genes.gtf` is a gene annotation file,
and `splicesites.txt` is a list of splice sites with which you provide HISAT2 in this mode.
Note that it is better to use indexes built using annotated transcripts (such as <i>genome_tran</i> or <i>genome_snp_tran</i>), which works better
than using this option. It has no effect to provide splice sites that are already included in the indexes.
--novel-splicesite-outfile <path>
In this mode, HISAT2 reports a list of splice sites in the file <path>:
chromosome name `<tab>` genomic position of the flanking base on the left side of an intron `<tab>` genomic position of the flanking base on the right `<tab>` strand (+, -, and .)
'.' indicates an unknown strand for non-canonical splice sites.
--novel-splicesite-infile <path>
With this mode, you can provide a list of novel splice sites that were generated from the above option "--novel-splicesite-outfile".
--no-temp-splicesite
HISAT2, by default, makes use of splice sites found by earlier reads to align later reads in the same run,
in particular, reads with small anchors (<= 15 bp).
The option disables this default alignment strategy.
--no-spliced-alignment
Disable spliced alignment.
--rna-strandness <string>
Specify strand-specific information: the default is unstranded.
For single-end reads, use F or R.
'F' means a read corresponds to a transcript.
'R' means a read corresponds to the reverse complemented counterpart of a transcript.
For paired-end reads, use either FR or RF.
With this option being used, every read alignment will have an XS attribute tag:
'+' means a read belongs to a transcript on '+' strand of genome.
'-' means a read belongs to a transcript on '-' strand of genome.
(TopHat has a similar option, --library-type option, where fr-firststrand corresponds to R and RF; fr-secondstrand corresponds to F and FR.)
--tmo/--transcriptome-mapping-only
Report only those alignments within known transcripts.
--dta/--downstream-transcriptome-assembly
Report alignments tailored for transcript assemblers including StringTie.
With this option, HISAT2 requires longer anchor lengths for de novo discovery of splice sites.
This leads to fewer alignments with short-anchors,
which helps transcript assemblers improve significantly in computation and memory usage.
--dta-cufflinks
Report alignments tailored specifically for Cufflinks. In addition to what HISAT2 does with the above option (--dta),
With this option, HISAT2 looks for novel splice sites with three signals (GT/AG, GC/AG, AT/AC), but all user-provided splice sites are used irrespective of their signals.
HISAT2 produces an optional field, XS:A:[+-], for every spliced alignment.
--no-templatelen-adjustment
Disables template length adjustment for RNA-seq reads.
#### Reporting options
-k <int>
It searches for at most `<int>` distinct, primary alignments for each read.
Primary alignments mean alignments whose alignment score is equal or higher than any other alignments.
The search terminates when it can't find more distinct valid alignments, or when it
finds `<int>`, whichever happens first. The alignment score for a paired-end
alignment equals the sum of the alignment scores of the individual mates. Each
reported read or pair alignment beyond the first has the SAM 'secondary' bit
(which equals 256) set in its FLAGS field. For reads that have more than
`<int>` distinct, valid alignments, `hisat2` does not guarantee that the
`<int>` alignments reported are the best possible in terms of alignment score. Default: 5 (HFM) or 10 (HGFM)
Note: HISAT2 is not designed with large values for `-k` in mind, and when
aligning reads to long, repetitive genomes large `-k` can be very, very slow.
--max-seeds <int>
HISAT2, like other aligners, uses seed-and-extend approaches. HISAT2 tries to extend seeds to full-length alignments. In HISAT2, --max-seeds is used to control the maximum number of seeds that will be extended. HISAT2 extends up to these many seeds and skips the rest of the seeds. Large values for `--max-seeds` may improve alignment sensitivity, but HISAT2 is not designed with large values for `--max-seeds` in mind, and when aligning reads to long, repetitive genomes large `--max-seeds` can be very, very slow. The default value is the maximum of 5 and the value that comes with`-k`.
--secondary
Report secondary alignments.
#### Paired-end options
-I/--minins <int>
The minimum fragment length for valid paired-end alignments.This option is valid only with --no-spliced-alignment.
E.g. if `-I 60` is specified and a paired-end alignment consists of two 20-bp alignments in the
appropriate orientation with a 20-bp gap between them, that alignment is
considered valid (as long as `-X` is also satisfied). A 19-bp gap would not
be valid in that case. If trimming options `-3` or `-5` are also used, the
`-I` constraint is applied with respect to the untrimmed mates.
The larger the difference between `-I` and `-X`, the slower HISAT2 will
run. This is because larger differences between `-I` and `-X` require that
HISAT2 scan a larger window to determine if a concordant alignment exists.
For typical fragment length ranges (200 to 400 nucleotides), HISAT2 is very
efficient.
Default: 0 (essentially imposing no minimum)
-X/--maxins <int>
The maximum fragment length for valid paired-end alignments. This option is valid only with --no-spliced-alignment.
E.g. if `-X 100` is specified and a paired-end alignment consists of two 20-bp alignments in the
proper orientation with a 60-bp gap between them, that alignment is considered
valid (as long as `-I` is also satisfied). A 61-bp gap would not be valid in
that case. If trimming options `-3` or `-5` are also used, the `-X`
constraint is applied with respect to the untrimmed mates, not the trimmed
mates.
The larger the difference between `-I` and `-X`, the slower HISAT2 will
run. This is because larger differences between `-I` and `-X` require that
HISAT2 scan a larger window to determine if a concordant alignment exists.
For typical fragment length ranges (200 to 400 nucleotides), HISAT2 is very
efficient.
Default: 500.
--fr/--rf/--ff
The upstream/downstream mate orientations for a valid paired-end alignment
against the forward reference strand. E.g., if `--fr` is specified and there is
a candidate paired-end alignment where mate 1 appears upstream of the reverse
complement of mate 2 and the fragment length constraints (`-I` and `-X`) are
met, that alignment is valid. Also, if mate 2 appears upstream of the reverse
complement of mate 1 and all other constraints are met, that too is valid.
`--rf` likewise requires that an upstream mate1 be reverse-complemented and a
downstream mate2 be forward-oriented. ` --ff` requires both an upstream mate 1
and a downstream mate 2 to be forward-oriented. Default: `--fr` (appropriate
for Illumina's Paired-end Sequencing Assay).
--no-mixed
By default, when `hisat2` cannot find a concordant or discordant alignment for
a pair, it then tries to find alignments for the individual mates. This option
disables that behavior.
--no-discordant
By default, `hisat2` looks for discordant alignments if it cannot find any
concordant alignments. A discordant alignment is an alignment where both mates
align uniquely, but that does not satisfy the paired-end constraints
(`--fr`/`--rf`/`--ff`, `-I`, `-X`). This option disables that behavior.
#### Output options
-t/--time
Print the wall-clock time required to load the index files and align the reads.
This is printed to the "standard error" ("stderr") filehandle. Default: off.
--un <path>
--un-gz <path>
--un-bz2 <path>
Write unpaired reads that fail to align to file at `<path>`. These reads
correspond to the SAM records with the FLAGS `0x4` bit set and neither the
`0x40` nor `0x80` bits set. If `--un-gz` is specified, output will be gzip
compressed. If `--un-bz2` is specified, output will be bzip2 compressed. Reads
written in this way will appear exactly as they did in the input file, without
any modification (same sequence, same name, same quality string, same quality
encoding). Reads will not necessarily appear in the same order as they did in
the input.
--al <path>
--al-gz <path>
--al-bz2 <path>
Write unpaired reads that align at least once to file at `<path>`. These reads
correspond to the SAM records with the FLAGS `0x4`, `0x40`, and `0x80` bits
unset. If `--al-gz` is specified, output will be gzip compressed. If `--al-bz2`
is specified, output will be bzip2 compressed. Reads written in this way will
appear exactly as they did in the input file, without any modification (same
sequence, same name, same quality string, same quality encoding). Reads will
not necessarily appear in the same order as they did in the input.
--un-conc <path>
--un-conc-gz <path>
--un-conc-bz2 <path>
Write paired-end reads that fail to align concordantly to file(s) at `<path>`.
These reads correspond to the SAM records with the FLAGS `0x4` bit set and
either the `0x40` or `0x80` bit set (depending on whether it's mate #1 or #2).
`.1` and `.2` strings are added to the filename to distinguish which file
contains mate #1 and mate #2. If a percent symbol, `%`, is used in `<path>`,
the percent symbol is replaced with `1` or `2` to make the per-mate filenames.
Otherwise, `.1` or `.2` are added before the final dot in `<path>` to make the
per-mate filenames. Reads written in this way will appear exactly as they did
in the input files, without any modification (same sequence, same name, same
quality string, same quality encoding). Reads will not necessarily appear in
the same order as they did in the inputs.
--al-conc <path>
--al-conc-gz <path>
--al-conc-bz2 <path>
Write paired-end reads that align concordantly at least once to file(s) at
`<path>`. These reads correspond to the SAM records with the FLAGS `0x4` bit
unset and either the `0x40` or `0x80` bit set (depending on whether it's mate #1
or #2). `.1` and `.2` strings are added to the filename to distinguish which
file contains mate #1 and mate #2. If a percent symbol, `%`, is used in
`<path>`, the percent symbol is replaced with `1` or `2` to make the per-mate
filenames. Otherwise, `.1` or `.2` are added before the final dot in `<path>` to
make the per-mate filenames. Reads written in this way will appear exactly as
they did in the input files, without any modification (same sequence, same name,
same quality string, same quality encoding). Reads will not necessarily appear
in the same order as they did in the inputs.
--quiet
Print nothing besides alignments and serious errors.
--summary-file
Print alignment summary to this file.
--new-summary
Print alignment summary in a new style, which is more machine-friendly.
--met-file <path>
Write `hisat2` metrics to file `<path>`. Having alignment metric can be useful
for debugging certain problems, especially performance issues. See also:
`--met`. Default: metrics disabled.
--met-stderr
Write `hisat2` metrics to the "standard error" ("stderr") filehandle. This is
not mutually exclusive with `--met-file`. Having alignment metric can be
useful for debugging certain problems, especially performance issues. See also:
`--met`. Default: metrics disabled.
--met <int>
Write a new `hisat2` metrics record every `<int>` seconds. Only matters if
either `--met-stderr` or `--met-file` are specified. Default: 1.
#### SAM options
--no-unal
Suppress SAM records for reads that failed to align.
--no-hd
Suppress SAM header lines (starting with `@`).
--no-sq
Suppress `@SQ` SAM header lines.
--rg-id <text>
Set the read group ID to `<text>`. This causes the SAM `@RG` header line to be
printed, with `<text>` as the value associated with the `ID:` tag. It also
causes the `RG:Z:` extra field to be attached to each SAM output record, with
value set to `<text>`.
--rg <text>
Add `<text>` (usually of the form `TAG:VAL`, e.g. `SM:Pool1`) as a field on the
`@RG` header line. Note: in order for the `@RG` line to appear, `--rg-id`
must also be specified. This is because the `ID` tag is required by the [SAM
Spec][SAM]. Specify `--rg` multiple times to set multiple fields. See the
[SAM Spec][SAM] for details about what fields are legal.
--remove-chrname
Remove 'chr' from reference names in alignment (e.g., chr18 to 18)
--add-chrname
Add 'chr' to reference names in alignment (e.g., 18 to chr18)
--omit-sec-seq
When printing secondary alignments, HISAT2 by default will write out the `SEQ`
and `QUAL` strings. Specifying this option causes HISAT2 to print an asterisk
in those fields instead.
#### Performance options
-o/--offrate <int>
Override the offrate of the index with `<int>`. If `<int>` is greater
than the offrate used to build the index, then some row markings are
discarded when the index is read into memory. This reduces the memory
footprint of the aligner but requires more time to calculate text
offsets. `<int>` must be greater than the value used to build the
index.
-p/--threads NTHREADS
Launch `NTHREADS` parallel search threads (default: 1). Threads will run on
separate processors/cores and synchronize when parsing reads and outputting
alignments. Searching for alignments is highly parallel, and speedup is close
to linear. Increasing `-p` increases HISAT2's memory footprint. E.g. when
aligning to a human genome index, increasing `-p` from 1 to 8 increases the
memory footprint by a few hundred megabytes. This option is only available if
`hisat2` is linked with the `pthreads` library (i.e. if `HISAT2_PTHREADS=0` is
not specified at build time).
--reorder
Guarantees that output SAM records are printed in an order corresponding to the
order of the reads in the original input file, even when `-p` is set greater
than 1. Specifying `--reorder` and setting `-p` greater than 1 causes HISAT2
to run somewhat slower and use somewhat more memory then if `--reorder` were
not specified. Has no effect if `-p` is set to 1, since output order will
naturally correspond to input order in that case.
--mm
Use memory-mapped I/O to load the index, rather than typical file I/O.
Memory-mapping allows many concurrent `hisat2` processes on the same computer to
share the same memory image of the index (i.e. you pay the memory overhead just
once). This facilitates memory-efficient parallelization of `hisat2` in
situations where using `-p` is not possible or not preferable.
#### Other options
--qc-filter
Filter out reads for which the QSEQ filter field is non-zero. Only has an
effect when read format is `--qseq`. Default: off.
--seed <int>
Use `<int>` as the seed for pseudo-random number generator. Default: 0.
--non-deterministic
Normally, HISAT2 re-initializes its pseudo-random generator for each read. It
seeds the generator with a number derived from (a) the read name, (b) the
nucleotide sequence, (c) the quality sequence, (d) the value of the `--seed`
option. This means that if two reads are identical (same name, same
nucleotides, same qualities) HISAT2 will find and report the same alignment(s)
for both, even if there was ambiguity. When `--non-deterministic` is specified,
HISAT2 re-initializes its pseudo-random generator for each read using the
current time. This means that HISAT2 will not necessarily report the same
alignment for two identical reads. This is counter-intuitive for some users,
but might be more appropriate in situations where the input consists of many
identical reads.
--version
Print version information and quit.
-h/--help
Print usage information and quit.
SAM output
----------
Following is a brief description of the [SAM] format as output by `hisat2`.
For more details, see the [SAM format specification][SAM].
By default, `hisat2` prints a SAM header with `@HD`, `@SQ` and `@PG` lines.
When one or more `--rg` arguments are specified, `hisat2` will also print
an `@RG` line that includes all user-specified `--rg` tokens separated by
tabs.
Each subsequent line describes an alignment or, if the read failed to align, a
read. Each line is a collection of at least 12 fields separated by tabs; from
left to right, the fields are:
1. Name of read that aligned.
Note that the [SAM specification] disallows whitespace in the read name.
If the read name contains any whitespace characters, HISAT2 will truncate
the name at the first whitespace character. This is similar to the
behavior of other tools.
2. Sum of all applicable flags. Flags relevant to HISAT2 are:
1
The read is one of a pair
2
The alignment is one end of a proper paired-end alignment
4
The read has no reported alignments
8
The read is one of a pair and has no reported alignments
16
The alignment is to the reverse reference strand
32
The other mate in the paired-end alignment is aligned to the
reverse reference strand
64
The read is mate 1 in a pair
128
The read is mate 2 in a pair
Thus, an unpaired read that aligns to the reverse reference strand
will have flag 16. A paired-end read that aligns and is the first
mate in the pair will have flag 83 (= 64 + 16 + 2 + 1).
3. Name of reference sequence where alignment occurs
4. 1-based offset into the forward reference strand where leftmost
character of the alignment occurs
5. Mapping quality
6. CIGAR string representation of alignment
7. Name of reference sequence where mate's alignment occurs. Set to `=` if the
mate's reference sequence is the same as this alignment's, or `*` if there is no
mate.
8. 1-based offset into the forward reference strand where leftmost character of
the mate's alignment occurs. Offset is 0 if there is no mate.
9. Inferred fragment length. Size is negative if the mate's alignment occurs
upstream of this alignment. Size is 0 if the mates did not align concordantly.
However, size is non-0 if the mates aligned discordantly to the same
chromosome.
10. Read sequence (reverse-complemented if aligned to the reverse strand)
11. ASCII-encoded read qualities (reverse-complemented if the read aligned to
the reverse strand). The encoded quality values are on the [Phred quality]
scale and the encoding is ASCII-offset by 33 (ASCII char `!`), similarly to a
[FASTQ] file.
12. Optional fields. Fields are tab-separated. `hisat2` outputs zero or more
of these optional fields for each alignment, depending on the type of the
alignment:
AS:i:<N>
Alignment score. Can be negative. Only present if SAM record is for
an aligned read.
ZS:i:<N>
Alignment score for the best-scoring alignment found other than the
alignment reported. Can be negative. Only present if the SAM record is
for an aligned read and more than one alignment was found for the read.
Note that, when the read is part of a concordantly-aligned pair, this score
could be greater than `AS:i`.
YS:i:<N>
Alignment score for opposite mate in the paired-end alignment. Only present
if the SAM record is for a read that aligned as part of a paired-end
alignment.
XN:i:<N>
The number of ambiguous bases in the reference covering this alignment.
Only present if SAM record is for an aligned read.
XM:i:<N>
The number of mismatches in the alignment. Only present if SAM record is
for an aligned read.
XO:i:<N>
The number of gap opens, for both read and reference gaps, in the alignment.
Only present if SAM record is for an aligned read.
XG:i:<N>
The number of gap extensions, for both read and reference gaps, in the
alignment. Only present if SAM record is for an aligned read.
NM:i:<N>
The edit distance; that is, the minimal number of one-nucleotide edits
(substitutions, insertions and deletions) needed to transform the read
string into the reference string. Only present if SAM record is for an
aligned read.
YF:Z:<S>
String indicating reason why the read was filtered out. See also:
[Filtering]. Only appears for reads that were filtered out.
YT:Z:<S>