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Long Span DNA Paired-End-Tag (DNA-PET) Sequencing Strategy for the Interrogation of Genomic Structural Mutations and Fusion-Point-Guided Reconstruction of Amplicons
Authors:Fei Yao  Pramila N. Ariyaratne  Axel M. Hillmer  Wah Heng Lee  Guoliang Li  Audrey S. M. Teo  Xing Yi Woo  Zhenshui Zhang  Jieqi P. Chen  Wan Ting Poh  Kelson F. B. Zawack  Chee Seng Chan  See Ting Leong  Say Chuan Neo  Poh Sum D. Choi  Song Gao  Niranjan Nagarajan  Hervé Thoreau  Atif Shahab  Xiaoan Ruan  Valère Cacheux-Rataboul  Chia-Lin Wei  Guillaume Bourque  Wing-Kin Sung  Edison T. Liu  Yijun Ruan
Abstract:Structural variations (SVs) contribute significantly to the variability of the human genome and extensive genomic rearrangements are a hallmark of cancer. While genomic DNA paired-end-tag (DNA-PET) sequencing is an attractive approach to identify genomic SVs, the current application of PET sequencing with short insert size DNA can be insufficient for the comprehensive mapping of SVs in low complexity and repeat-rich genomic regions. We employed a recently developed procedure to generate PET sequencing data using large DNA inserts of 10–20 kb and compared their characteristics with short insert (1 kb) libraries for their ability to identify SVs. Our results suggest that although short insert libraries bear an advantage in identifying small deletions, they do not provide significantly better breakpoint resolution. In contrast, large inserts are superior to short inserts in providing higher physical genome coverage for the same sequencing cost and achieve greater sensitivity, in practice, for the identification of several classes of SVs, such as copy number neutral and complex events. Furthermore, our results confirm that large insert libraries allow for the identification of SVs within repetitive sequences, which cannot be spanned by short inserts. This provides a key advantage in studying rearrangements in cancer, and we show how it can be used in a fusion-point-guided-concatenation algorithm to study focally amplified regions in cancer.
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