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Sequence and structural variation in a human genome uncovered by short-read, massively parallel ligation sequencing using two-base encoding

Authors :
Stephen F. McLaughlin
Martin G. Reese
Gina Costa
Francisco M. De La Vega
Cynthia L. Hendrickson
Can Alkan
Joel A. Malek
Tanya Sokolsky
Andrew MacBride
Alena A. Antipova
Kathleen C. Hayashibara
Zheng Zhang
Jonathan M. Manning
Alan Blanchard
Swati Ranade
Haoning Fu
Kevin McKernan
Adam Sannicandro
Damon S. Perez
Vineet Bafna
Jeremy R. Stuart
Michael P. Moore
Robert E. Beaudoin
Rajesh Gottimukkala
Yutao Fu
Lei Zhang
Eric F. Tsung
Andrew Sheridan
Cisyla Duncan
Ali Bashir
Fiona Hyland
Jeffrey M. Kidd
Jeffrey K. Ichikawa
Michael W. Laptewicz
Michael D. Rhodes
Brittany E. Coleman
Michael R. Lyons
Eileen T. Dimalanta
Clarence Lee
Shan Yang
Bin Li
Evan E. Eichler
Heather E. Peckham
Christopher Clouser
Lev Kotler
Source :
Genome research. 19(9)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

We describe the genome sequencing of an anonymous individual of African origin using a novel ligation-based sequencing assay that enables a unique form of error correction that improves the raw accuracy of the aligned reads to >99.9%, allowing us to accurately call SNPs with as few as two reads per allele. We collected several billion mate-paired reads yielding ∼18× haploid coverage of aligned sequence and close to 300× clone coverage. Over 98% of the reference genome is covered with at least one uniquely placed read, and 99.65% is spanned by at least one uniquely placed mate-paired clone. We identify over 3.8 million SNPs, 19% of which are novel. Mate-paired data are used to physically resolve haplotype phases of nearly two-thirds of the genotypes obtained and produce phased segments of up to 215 kb. We detect 226,529 intra-read indels, 5590 indels between mate-paired reads, 91 inversions, and four gene fusions. We use a novel approach for detecting indels between mate-paired reads that are smaller than the standard deviation of the insert size of the library and discover deletions in common with those detected with our intra-read approach. Dozens of mutations previously described in OMIM and hundreds of nonsynonymous single-nucleotide and structural variants in genes previously implicated in disease are identified in this individual. There is more genetic variation in the human genome still to be uncovered, and we provide guidance for future surveys in populations and cancer biopsies.

Details

ISSN :
15495469
Volume :
19
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....35a04f6a369e8007f7c59913c85ce72b