scholarly journals Inconsistency and features of single nucleotide variants detected in whole exome sequencing versus transcriptome sequencing: A case study in lung cancer

Methods ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 83 ◽  
pp. 118-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy D. O’Brien ◽  
Peilin Jia ◽  
Junfeng Xia ◽  
Uma Saxena ◽  
Hailing Jin ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 228-228
Author(s):  
Joachim Kunz ◽  
Tobias Rausch ◽  
Obul R Bandapalli ◽  
Martina U. Muckenthaler ◽  
Adrian M Stuetz ◽  
...  

Abstract Acute precursor T-lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) remains a serious challenge in pediatric oncology, because relapses carry a particularly poor prognosis with high rates of induction failure and death despite generally excellent treatment responses of the initial disease. It is critical, therefore, to understand the molecular evolution of pediatric T-ALL and to elucidate the mechanisms leading to T-ALL relapse and to understand the differences in treatment response between the two phases of the disease. We have thus subjected DNA from bone marrow samples obtained at the time of initial diagnosis, remission and relapse of 14 patients to whole exome sequencing (WES). Eleven patients suffered from early relapse (duration of remission 6-19 months) and 3 patients from late relapse (duration of remission 29-46 months).The Agilent SureSelect Target Enrichment Kit was used to capture human exons for deep sequencing. The captured fragments were sequenced as 100 bp paired reads using an Illumina HiSeq2000 sequencing instrument. All sequenced DNA reads were preprocessed using Trimmomatic (Lohse et al., Nucl. Acids Res., 2012) to clip adapter contaminations and to trim reads for low quality bases. The remaining reads greater than 36bp were mapped to build hg19 of the human reference genome with Stampy (Lunter & Goodson, Genome Res. 2011), using default parameters. Following such preprocessing, the number of mapped reads was >95% for all samples. Single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) were called using SAMtools mpileup (Li et al., Bioinformatics, 2009). The number of exonic SNVs varied between 23,741 and 31,418 per sample. To facilitate a fast classification and identification of candidate driver mutations, all identified coding SNVs were comprehensively annotated using the ANNOVAR framework (Wang et al., Nat. Rev. Genet., 2010). To identify possible somatic driver mutations, candidate SNVs were filtered for non-synonymous, stopgain or stoploss SNVs, requiring an SNV quality greater or equal to 50, and requiring absence of segmental duplications. Leukemia-specific mutations were identified by filtering against the corresponding remission sample and validated by Sanger sequencing of the genomic DNA following PCR amplification. We identified on average 9.3 somatic single nucleotide variants (SNV) and 0.6 insertions and deletions (indels) per patient sample at the time of initial diagnosis and 21.7 SNVs and 0.3 indels in relapse. On average, 6.3 SNVs were detected both at the time of initial diagnosis and in relapse. These SNVs were thus defined as leukemia specific. Further to SNVs, we have also estimated the frequency of copy number variations (CNV) at low resolution. Apart from the deletions resulting from T-cell receptor rearrangement, we identified on average for each patient 0.7 copy number gains and 2.2 copy number losses at the time of initial diagnosis and 0.5 copy number gains and 2.4 copy number losses in relapse. We detected 24/27 copy number alterations both in initial diagnosis and in relapse. The most common CNV detected was the CDKN2A/B deletion on chromosome 9p. Nine genes were recurrently mutated in 2 or more patients thus indicating the functional leukemogenic potential of these SNVs in T-ALL. These recurrent mutations included known oncogenes (Notch1), tumor suppressor genes (FBXW7, PHF6, WT1) and genes conferring drug resistance (NT5C2). In several patients one gene (such as Notch 1, PHF6, WT1) carried different mutations either at the time of initial diagnosis and or in relapse, indicating that the major leukemic clone had been eradicated by primary treatment, but that a minor clone had persisted and expanded during relapse. The types of mutations did not differ significantly between mutations that were either already present at diagnosis or those that were newly acquired in relapse, indicating that the treatment did not cause specific genomic damage. We will further characterize the clonal evolution of T-ALL into relapse by targeted re-sequencing at high depth of genes with either relapse specific or initial-disease specific mutations. In conclusion, T-ALL relapse differs from primary disease by a higher number of leukemogenic SNVs without gross genomic instability resulting in large CNVs. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-37
Author(s):  
E. S. Striukova ◽  
E. V. Shakhtshneider ◽  
D. E. Ivanoshchuk ◽  
Yu. I. Ragino ◽  
Ya. V. Polonskaya ◽  
...  

Factor V, encoded by the F5 gene, is a procoagulant blood clotting factor that increases the production of thrombin, the central enzyme that converts fibrinogen to fibrin, which leads to the formation of a blood clot. The F5 gene is localized to 1q24.2 chromosome and consists of 25 exons. There are various mutations in the F5 gene that lead to resistance of activated protein C (APC) (elimination of the APС cleavage site in factor V and factor Va), which can lead to arterial and venous thrombosis. The aim of the present study was to analyze variants of the F5 gene in patients diagnosed with coronary atherosclerosis without acute coronary syndrome with stable functional class II–IV angina pectoris, confirmed by coronary angiography data, using the method of whole exome sequencing.Material and methods. The study was conducted in the framework of the Program of joint research work IIPM — branch of the ICG SB RAS and the FSBI «Research Institute of Circulation Pathology named after E.N. Meshalkin» Ministry of Health of Russian Federation. The study included 30 men aged 40–70 years with coronary angiography-­verified coronary atherosclerosis, without ACS, with stable angina pectoris of the II–IV FC. Patients were admitted for coronary bypass surgery, and endarteriaectomy from the coronary artery (s) was performed during the operation according to intraoperative indications. Whole exome sequencing (SureSelectXT Human All Exon v.6+UTR) was carried out on an Illumina NextSeq 500 instrument (USA).Results. In 30 patients, 29 single-­nucleotide variants were found in the F5 gene. In patients with coronary atherosclerosis, rs9332701 of the F5 gene is 3.33 times more common, and rs6027 is 1.67 times more common than in the population. And rs184663825 was found in 3.33% of cases, while its occurrence in the population is 0.05%. For variants rs6034 and rs144979314, a possible damaging effect on the protein product is shown.Conclusion. The single-­nucleotide variants rs9332701, rs6027, rs184663825, rs6034, rs144979314 of the F5 gene are of interest for inclusion in the genetic panels for the analysis of risk factors for the development of acute coronary syndrome.


2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (02) ◽  
pp. 122-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa Hicks ◽  
A.H.M. Huq ◽  
Rajkumar Agarwal ◽  
Kuntal Sen

Case We report a 15-year-old Indian girl born to a consanguineous couple, who presented with epilepsy, developmental delay, neuroregression, and episodes of alternating hemiparesis. In addition, she had one episode of rhabdomyolysis at the age of 7 years. Extensive genetic and metabolic work up through the years was unrevealing. Eventually a trio whole exome sequencing (WES) revealed homozygous single nucleotide variants in TANGO2 gene. Discussion TANGO2 related recurrent metabolic crises with encephalomyopathy and cardiac arrhythmias were described very recently and only 15 cases were reported in literature at the time of writing. Alternating hemiplegia of childhood which was seen in our patient, has not been described in previous patients with TANGO2 mutation, and thereby expands the emerging phenotypic spectrum of this novel entity. This report also reiterates the utility of WES in diagnosing newly recognized neurogenetic conditions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youngil Koh ◽  
Daeyoon Kim ◽  
Woo-June Jung ◽  
Kwang-Sung Ahn ◽  
Sung-Soo Yoon

Background.Previously we established two cell lines (SNU_MM1393_BM and SNU_MM1393_SC) from different tissues (bone marrow and subcutis) of mice which were injected with single patient’s myeloma sample. We tried to define genetic changes specific for each cell line using whole exome sequencing (WES).Materials and Methods.We extracted DNA from SNU_MM1393_BM and SNU_MM1393_SC and performed WES. For single nucleotide variants (SNV) calling, we used Varscan2. Annotation of mutation was performed using ANNOVAR.Results.When calling of somatic mutations was performed, 68 genes were nonsynonymously mutated only in SNU_MM1393_SC, while 136 genes were nonsynonymously mutated only in SNU_MM1393_BM.KIAA1199, FRY, AP3B2,andOPTCwere representative genes specifically mutated in SNU_MM1393_SC. When comparison analysis was performed using TCGA data, mutational pattern of SNU_MM1393_SC resembled that of melanoma mostly. Pathway analysis using KEGG database showed that mutated genes specific of SNU_MM1393_BM were related to differentiation, while those of SNU_MM1393_SC were related to tumorigenesis.Conclusion.We found out genetic changes that underlie tropism of myeloma cells using WES. Genetic signature of cutaneous plasmacytoma shares that of melanoma implying common mechanism for skin tropism.KIAA1199, FRY, AP3B2,andOPTCare candidate genes for skin tropism of cancers.


2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-19
Author(s):  
Augusto C. Soares dos Santos Junior ◽  
Luciana B. Rodrigues ◽  
Raony G. Corrêa Do Carmo Lisboa Cardenas ◽  
Patricia G.P. Couto ◽  
Luiz A. Cunha de Marco ◽  
...  

Introduction: Congenital megaureter constitutes the second most frequent cause of hydronephrosis in children. There is still much debate on what extent environmental or genetic factors are involved in the pathogenesis of congenital megaureter. Objectives: This study aimed at investigating a pair of monozygotic twins discordant for the expression of bilateral congenital megaureter using the whole exome sequencing technique. Methods: Peripheral blood DNA was extracted and then sequenced using the whole exome technique from a pair of twins discordant for the presence of bilateral congenital refluxing unobstructed megaureter, his parents and a set of 11 non-related individuals with confirmed diagnosis of congenital megaureter. The DNA of the set of 11 non-related individuals was pooled in three groups. The monozygotic twins and their parents had DNA samples sequenced separately. Sanger validation was performed after data was filtered. Results: In the proband were identified 256 candidate genes, including TBX3, GATA6, DHH, LDB3, and HNF1, which are expressed in the urinary tract during the embryonic period. After Sanger validation, the SNVs found in the genes TBX3, GATA6, DHH and LDB3 were not confirmed in the proband. The SNV chr17:36104650 in the HNF1b gene was confirmed in the proband, his twin brother and the mother, however was not found in the pool of 11 non-related individuals with congenital megaureter. Conclusion: Due to the possible complex causative network of genetic variations and the challenges regarding the use of the whole exome sequencing technique we could not unequivocally associate the genetic variations identified in this study with the development of the congenital megaureter.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Jiang ◽  
Dong Chen

Abstract Background Degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (DLSS) is a common lumbar disease that requires surgery. Previous studies have indicated that genetic mutations are implicated in DLSS. However, studies on specific gene mutations are scarce. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) is a valuable research tool that identifies disease-causing genes and could become an effective strategy to investigate DLSS pathogenesis. Methods From January 2016 to December 2017, we recruited 50 unrelated patients with symptoms consistent with DLSS and 25 unrelated healthy controls. We conducted WES and exome data analysis to identify susceptible genes. Allele mutations firstly identified potential DLSS variants in controls to the patients’ group. We conducted a site-based association analysis to identify pathogenic variants using PolyPhen2, SIFT, Mutation Taster, Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion, and Phenolyzer algorithms. Potential variants were further confirmed using manual curation and validated using Sanger sequencing. Results In this cohort, the major classification variant was missense_mutation, the major variant type was single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), and the major single nucleotide variation was C > T. Multiple SNPs in 34 genes were identified when filtered allele mutations in controls to retain only patient mutations. Pathway enrichment analyses revealed that mutated genes were mainly enriched for immune response-related signaling pathways. Using the Novegene database, site-based associations revealed several novel variants, including HLA-DRB1, PARK2, ACTR8, AOAH, BCORL1, MKRN2, NRG4, NUP205 genes, etc., were DLSS related. Conclusions Our study revealed that deleterious mutations in several genes might contribute to DLSS etiology. By screening and confirming susceptibility genes using WES, we provided more information on disease pathogenesis. Further WES studies incorporating larger DLSS patient cohorts are required to comprehend the genetic landscape of DLSS pathophysiology fully.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alana R. Rodney ◽  
Reuben M. Buckley ◽  
Robert S. Fulton ◽  
Catrina Fronick ◽  
Todd Richmond ◽  
...  

AbstractOver 94 million domestic cats are susceptible to cancers and other common and rare diseases. Whole exome sequencing (WES) is a proven strategy to study these disease-causing variants. Presented is a 35.7 Mb exome capture design based on the annotated Felis_catus_9.0 genome assembly, covering 201,683 regions of the cat genome. Whole exome sequencing was conducted on 41 cats with known and unknown genetic diseases and traits, of which ten cats had matching whole genome sequence (WGS) data available, used to validate WES performance. At 80 × mean exome depth of coverage, 96.4% of on-target base coverage had a sequencing depth > 20-fold, while over 98% of single nucleotide variants (SNVs) identified by WGS were also identified by WES. Platform-specific SNVs were restricted to sex chromosomes and a small number of olfactory receptor genes. Within the 41 cats, we identified 31 previously known causal variants and discovered new gene candidate variants, including novel missense variance for polycystic kidney disease and atrichia in the Peterbald cat. These results show the utility of WES to identify novel gene candidate alleles for diseases and traits for the first time in a feline model.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document