scholarly journals Variant Allele Frequency

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Atsushi Kondo ◽  
China Nagano ◽  
Shinya Ishiko ◽  
Takashi Omori ◽  
Yuya Aoto ◽  
...  

AbstractGitelman syndrome is an autosomal recessive inherited salt-losing tubulopathy. It has a prevalence of around 1 in 40,000 people, and heterozygous carriers are estimated at approximately 1%, although the exact prevalence is unknown. We estimated the predicted prevalence of Gitelman syndrome based on multiple genome databases, HGVD and jMorp for the Japanese population and gnomAD for other ethnicities, and included all 274 pathogenic missense or nonsense variants registered in HGMD Professional. The frequencies of all these alleles were summed to calculate the total variant allele frequency in SLC12A3. The carrier frequency and the disease prevalence were assumed to be twice and the square of the total allele frequency, respectively, according to the Hardy–Weinberg principle. In the Japanese population, the total carrier frequencies were 0.0948 (9.5%) and 0.0868 (8.7%) and the calculated prevalence was 0.00225 (2.3 in 1000 people) and 0.00188 (1.9 in 1000 people) in HGVD and jMorp, respectively. Other ethnicities showed a prevalence varying from 0.000012 to 0.00083. These findings indicate that the prevalence of Gitelman syndrome in the Japanese population is higher than expected and that some other ethnicities also have a higher prevalence than has previously been considered.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antony Tin ◽  
Vasily Aushev ◽  
Ekaterina Kalashnikova ◽  
Raheleh Salari ◽  
Svetalana Shchegrova ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nidhan K. Biswas ◽  
Vikas Chandra ◽  
Neeta Sarkar-Roy ◽  
Tapojyoti Das ◽  
Rabindra N. Bhattacharya ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taro Matsutani ◽  
Michiaki Hamada

Intra-tumor heterogeneity is a phenomenon in which mutation profiles differ from cell to cell within the same tumor and is observed in almost all tumors. Understanding intra-tumor heterogeneity is essential from the clinical perspective. Numerous methods have been developed to predict this phenomenon based on variant allele frequency. Among the methods, CloneSig models the variant allele frequency and mutation signatures simultaneously and provides an accurate clone decomposition. However, this method has limitations in terms of clone number selection and modeling. We propose SigTracer, a novel hierarchical Bayesian approach for analyzing intra-tumor heterogeneity based on mutation signatures to tackle these issues. We show that SigTracer predicts more reasonable clone decompositions than the existing methods that use artificial data that mimic cancer genomes. We applied SigTracer to whole-genome sequences of blood cancer samples. The results were consistent with past findings that single base substitutions caused by a specific signature (previously reported as SBS9) related to the activation-induced cytidine deaminase intensively lie within immunoglobulin-coding regions for chronic lymphocytic leukemia samples. Furthermore, we showed that this signature mutates regions responsible for cell-cell adhesion. Accurate assignments of mutations to signatures by SigTracer can provide novel insights into signature origins and mutational processes.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 599-599
Author(s):  
Franck Rapaport ◽  
Marc Robert de Massy ◽  
Adil al Hinai ◽  
Mathijs A. Sanders ◽  
Todd Hricik ◽  
...  

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most common type of acute leukemia in adults. Unfortunately, a significant proportion of patients relapse after responding to initial treatment reflecting our poor understanding of the mechanisms mediating therapy resistance and relapse. We hypothesized that understanding the evolution of the mutational landscape between diagnosis and relapse is essential in order to identify mutational markers associated with sensitivity or resistance to treatment. To address this hypothesis we assembled a cohort of 53 clinically annotated, paired AML patient samples (diagnosis, relapse and patient-matched germline samples; mean age = 52 years). All patients achieved clinical remission after treatment with combination chemotherapy (cytarabine arabinoside and an anthracycline) during induction phase followed by consolidation chemotherapy treatment with or without a stem cell transplantation in first remission. Serial samples were collected at the time of initial diagnosis and within three months of relapse (mean time to relapse 455 days). We performed whole-exome and targeted capture followed by high-throughput sequencing. We aligned samples with BWA, recalibrated them with The Genome Analysis Toolkit (GATK) and then compiled integrated calls from substitution and indel callers (Mutect, Scalpel, Strelka, Varscan and Somatic Sniper). We performed several layers of post-processing filtering on these calls, including removing non-oncogenic mutations and previously documented non-somatic variants, and correcting for the variant allele fraction of indel calls. We filtered out the variants that were found to occur in non-copy number neutral re-arrangements using the clinically determined cytogenetic data. Furthermore, we assessed for copy number events, including loss of heterozygosity events, and for the presence and the variant allele frequency of the FLT3-ITD in our samples. We observed a median of 4.5 and 5 mutations per patient at diagnosis and relapse, respectively, with 3.5 mutations being shared by paired diagnosis and relapse samples. When limiting our analysis to genes previously shown to contribute to leukemogenesis, we found a median of 1.5 and 2 mutations per patient at diagnosis and relapse, with 1 mutation being shared. FLT3, DNMT3A, IDH2, NRAS, RUNX1 and TET2 were among the most commonly mutated genes, with a detected presence rate of 28%, 25%, 19%, 19%, 11% and 11%, respectively, in the diagnosis samples and 39%, 23%, 19%, 4%, 13% and 11% in the relapse samples. We identified significant variation in the variant allele frequency (VAF) for several of the mutations related to these genes and others, denoting variations in the cellular prevalence of the related clones after adjustment for tumor content using the mutations with the highest VAF to delineate clonal architecture. Specifically, we observed that DNMT3A, IDH2, TET2 variants are most commonly present in the bulk AML clone, and persist after treatment. WT1, GATA2 and FLT3mutations are predicted to confer relative resistance to standard combination chemotherapy treatment based on their increased VAF at relapse, whereas KRAS and NRAS subclone(s) are more sensitive to chemotherapy since their VAFs decrease following multiagent chemotherapy. Fifteen patients presented new events in leukemogenesis-related genes at relapse. Overall, our results support a model of AML as a disease with a complex mutational hierarchy and clonal architecture and provide further insight into how these change in response to standard induction therapy. Our data suggests that future efforts to develop targeted therapies with maximal clinical benefit in combination with standard induction treatments should be placed on mutated genes identified to be more strongly associated with disease relapse. Authors contributed equally: F. Rapaport and M.R. De Massy Authors contributed equally: A. al Hinai and M.A. Sanders Disclosures Guzman: Cellectis: Research Funding. Roboz:Cellectis: Research Funding; Agios, Amgen, Amphivena, Astex, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celator, Celgene, Genoptix, Janssen, Juno, MEI Pharma, MedImmune, Novartis, Onconova, Pfizer, Roche/Genentech, Sunesis, Teva: Consultancy. Melnick:Janssen: Research Funding. Levine:Qiagen: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis: Consultancy.


Oncotarget ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (24) ◽  
pp. 36266-36279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika Belickova ◽  
Jitka Vesela ◽  
Anna Jonasova ◽  
Barbora Pejsova ◽  
Hana Votavova ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Fernanda Maruri ◽  
Yan Guo ◽  
Amondrea Blackman ◽  
Yuri F van der Heijden ◽  
Peter F Rebeiro ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Fluoroquinolone resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is conferred by DNA gyrase mutations, but not all fluoroquinolone-resistant Mtb isolates have mutations detected. The optimal allele frequency threshold to identify resistance-conferring mutations by whole-genome sequencing is unknown. Methods Phenotypically ofloxacin-resistant and lineage-matched ofloxacin-susceptible Mtb isolates underwent whole-genome sequencing at an average coverage depth of 868 reads. Polymorphisms within the quinolone-resistance–determining region (QRDR) of gyrA and gyrB were identified. The allele frequency threshold using the Genome Analysis Toolkit pipeline was ~8%; allele-level data identified the predominant variant allele frequency and mutational burden (ie, sum of all variant allele frequencies in the QRDR) in gyrA, gyrB, and gyrA + gyrB for each isolate. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves assessed the optimal measure of allele frequency and potential thresholds for identifying phenotypically resistant isolates. Results Of 42 ofloxacin-resistant Mtb isolates, area under the ROC curve (AUC) was highest for predominant variant allele frequency, so that measure was used to evaluate optimal mutation detection thresholds. AUCs for 8%, 2.5%, and 0.8% thresholds were 0.8452, 0.9286, and 0.9069, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity were 69% and 100% for 8%, 86% and 100% for 2.5%, 91% and 91% for 0.8%. The sensitivity of the 2.5% and 0.8% thresholds were significantly higher than the 8% threshold (P = .016 and .004, respectively) but not significantly different between one another (P = .5). Conclusions A predominant mutation allele frequency threshold of 2.5% had the highest AUC for detecting DNA gyrase mutations that confer ofloxacin resistance, and was therefore the optimal threshold.


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