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A workflow to increase verification rate of chromosomal structural rearrangements using high-throughput next-generation sequencing

Authors :
Kelly Quek
Katia Nones
Ann-Marie Patch
J. Lynn Fink
Felicity Newell
Nicole Cloonan
David Miller
Muhammad Z. H. Fadlullah
Karin Kassahn
Angelika N. Christ
Timothy J. C. Bruxner
Suzanne Manning
Ivon Harliwong
Senel Idrisoglu
Craig Nourse
Ehsan Nourbakhsh
Shivangi Wani
Anita Steptoe
Matthew Anderson
Oliver Holmes
Conrad Leonard
Darrin Taylor
Scott Wood
Qinying Xu
Peter Wilson
Andrew V. Biankin
John V. Pearson
Nic Waddell
Sean M. Grimmond
Source :
BioTechniques, Vol 57, Iss 1, Pp 31-38 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

Abstract

Somatic rearrangements, which are commonly found in human cancer genomes, contribute to the progression and maintenance of cancers. Conventionally, the verification of somatic rearrangements comprises many manual steps and Sanger sequencing. This is labor intensive when verifying a large number of rearrangements in a large cohort. To increase the verification throughput, we devised a high-throughput workflow that utilizes benchtop next-generation sequencing and in-house bioinformatics tools to link the laboratory processes. In the proposed workflow, primers are automatically designed. PCR and an optional gel electrophoresis step to confirm the somatic nature of the rearrangements are performed. PCR products of somatic events are pooled for Ion Torrent PGM and/or Illumina MiSeq sequencing, the resulting sequence reads are assembled into consensus contigs by a consensus assembler, and an automated BLAT is used to resolve the breakpoints to base level. We compared sequences and breakpoints of verified somatic rearrangements between the conventional and high-throughput workflow. The results showed that next-generation sequencing methods are comparable to conventional Sanger sequencing. The identified breakpoints obtained from next-generation sequencing methods were highly accurate and reproducible. Furthermore, the proposed workflow allows hundreds of events to be processed in a shorter time frame compared with the conventional workflow.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19409818 and 07366205
Volume :
57
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BioTechniques
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6f3fcf04a54456ae88b85267a1e519
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2144/000114189