Concurrent Whole-Genome Haplotyping and Copy-Number Profiling of Single Cells |
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Authors: | Masoud Zamani  Esteki,Eftychia Dimitriadou,Ligia Mateiu,Cindy Melotte,Niels Van  der  Aa,Parveen Kumar,Rakhi Das,Koen Theunis,Jiqiu Cheng,Eric Legius,Yves Moreau,Sophie Debrock,Thomas D&rsquo Hooghe,Pieter Verdyck,Martine De  Rycke,Karen Sermon,Joris  R. Vermeesch,Thierry Voet |
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Affiliation: | 1 Centre for Human Genetics, University Hospital Leuven, Department of Human Genetics, KU Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium;2 Department of Electrical Engineering, ESAT-STADIUS, KU Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium;3 Leuven University Fertility Center, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Herestraat 49, 3000 Leuven, Belgium;4 Centre for Medical Genetics, Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel, Laarbeeklaan 101, 1090 Brussels, Belgium;5 Research group Reproduction and Genetics (REGE), Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) Laarbeeklaan 101, 1090 Brussels, Belgium;6 Single-cell Genomics Centre, Welcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton CB10 1SA, UK |
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Abstract: | Methods for haplotyping and DNA copy-number typing of single cells are paramount for studying genomic heterogeneity and enabling genetic diagnosis. Before analyzing the DNA of a single cell by microarray or next-generation sequencing, a whole-genome amplification (WGA) process is required, but it substantially distorts the frequency and composition of the cell’s alleles. As a consequence, haplotyping methods suffer from error-prone discrete SNP genotypes (AA, AB, BB) and DNA copy-number profiling remains difficult because true DNA copy-number aberrations have to be discriminated from WGA artifacts. Here, we developed a single-cell genome analysis method that reconstructs genome-wide haplotype architectures as well as the copy-number and segregational origin of those haplotypes by employing phased parental genotypes and deciphering WGA-distorted SNP B-allele fractions via a process we coin haplarithmisis. We demonstrate that the method can be applied as a generic method for preimplantation genetic diagnosis on single cells biopsied from human embryos, enabling diagnosis of disease alleles genome wide as well as numerical and structural chromosomal anomalies. Moreover, meiotic segregation errors can be distinguished from mitotic ones. |
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