1. Clinical Validation of Tagmentation-Based Genome Sequencing for Germline Disorders.
- Author
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Shen W, Sellers HL, Choate LA, Stein MI, Tandale PP, Tan J, Setlem R, Sakai Y, Fadra N, Sosa C, McClelland SP, Barnett SS, Rasmussen KJ, Runke CK, Smoley SA, Tillmans LS, Marcou CA, Rowsey RA, Thorland EC, Boczek NJ, and Kearney HM
- Subjects
- Humans, Base Sequence, Chromosome Mapping, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Gene Library, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, DNA, Rare Diseases
- Abstract
Genome sequencing (GS) is a powerful clinical tool used for the comprehensive diagnosis of germline disorders. GS library preparation typically involves mechanical DNA fragmentation, end repair, and bead-based library size selection followed by adapter ligation, which can require a large amount of input genomic DNA. Tagmentation using bead-linked transposomes can simplify the library preparation process and reduce the DNA input requirement. Here we describe the clinical validation of tagmentation-based PCR-free GS as a clinical test for rare germline disorders. Compared with the Genome-in-a-Bottle Consortium benchmark variant sets, GS had a recall >99.7% and a precision of 99.8% for single nucleotide variants and small insertion-deletions. GS also exhibited 100% sensitivity for clinically reported sequence variants and the copy number variants examined. Furthermore, GS detected mitochondrial sequence variants above 5% heteroplasmy and showed reliable detection of disease-relevant repeat expansions and SMN1 homozygous loss. Our results indicate that while lowering DNA input requirements and reducing library preparation time, GS enables uniform coverage across the genome as well as robust detection of various types of genetic alterations. With the advantage of comprehensive profiling of multiple types of genetic alterations, GS is positioned as an ideal first-tier diagnostic test for germline disorders., (Copyright © 2023 Association for Molecular Pathology and American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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