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Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation

The detection and quantification of genetic heterogeneity in populations of cells is fundamentally important to diverse fields, ranging from microbial evolution to human cancer genetics. However, despite the cost and throughput advances associated with massively parallel sequencing, it remains chall...

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Autores principales: Hiatt, Joseph B., Pritchard, Colin C., Salipante, Stephen J., O'Roak, Brian J., Shendure, Jay
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3638140/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23382536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.147686.112
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author Hiatt, Joseph B.
Pritchard, Colin C.
Salipante, Stephen J.
O'Roak, Brian J.
Shendure, Jay
author_facet Hiatt, Joseph B.
Pritchard, Colin C.
Salipante, Stephen J.
O'Roak, Brian J.
Shendure, Jay
author_sort Hiatt, Joseph B.
collection PubMed
description The detection and quantification of genetic heterogeneity in populations of cells is fundamentally important to diverse fields, ranging from microbial evolution to human cancer genetics. However, despite the cost and throughput advances associated with massively parallel sequencing, it remains challenging to reliably detect mutations that are present at a low relative abundance in a given DNA sample. Here we describe smMIP, an assay that combines single molecule tagging with multiplex targeted capture to enable practical and highly sensitive detection of low-frequency or subclonal variation. To demonstrate the potential of the method, we simultaneously resequenced 33 clinically informative cancer genes in eight cell line and 45 clinical cancer samples. Single molecule tagging facilitated extremely accurate consensus calling, with an estimated per-base error rate of 8.4 × 10(−6) in cell lines and 2.6 × 10(−5) in clinical specimens. False-positive mutations in the single molecule consensus base-calls exhibited patterns predominantly consistent with DNA damage, including 8-oxo-guanine and spontaneous deamination of cytosine. Based on mixing experiments with cell line samples, sensitivity for mutations above 1% frequency was 83% with no false positives. At clinically informative sites, we identified seven low-frequency point mutations (0.2%–4.7%), including BRAF p.V600E (melanoma, 0.2% alternate allele frequency), KRAS p.G12V (lung, 0.6%), JAK2 p.V617F (melanoma, colon, two lung, 0.3%–1.4%), and NRAS p.Q61R (colon, 4.7%). We anticipate that smMIP will be broadly adoptable as a practical and effective method for accurately detecting low-frequency mutations in both research and clinical settings.
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spelling pubmed-36381402013-11-01 Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation Hiatt, Joseph B. Pritchard, Colin C. Salipante, Stephen J. O'Roak, Brian J. Shendure, Jay Genome Res Method The detection and quantification of genetic heterogeneity in populations of cells is fundamentally important to diverse fields, ranging from microbial evolution to human cancer genetics. However, despite the cost and throughput advances associated with massively parallel sequencing, it remains challenging to reliably detect mutations that are present at a low relative abundance in a given DNA sample. Here we describe smMIP, an assay that combines single molecule tagging with multiplex targeted capture to enable practical and highly sensitive detection of low-frequency or subclonal variation. To demonstrate the potential of the method, we simultaneously resequenced 33 clinically informative cancer genes in eight cell line and 45 clinical cancer samples. Single molecule tagging facilitated extremely accurate consensus calling, with an estimated per-base error rate of 8.4 × 10(−6) in cell lines and 2.6 × 10(−5) in clinical specimens. False-positive mutations in the single molecule consensus base-calls exhibited patterns predominantly consistent with DNA damage, including 8-oxo-guanine and spontaneous deamination of cytosine. Based on mixing experiments with cell line samples, sensitivity for mutations above 1% frequency was 83% with no false positives. At clinically informative sites, we identified seven low-frequency point mutations (0.2%–4.7%), including BRAF p.V600E (melanoma, 0.2% alternate allele frequency), KRAS p.G12V (lung, 0.6%), JAK2 p.V617F (melanoma, colon, two lung, 0.3%–1.4%), and NRAS p.Q61R (colon, 4.7%). We anticipate that smMIP will be broadly adoptable as a practical and effective method for accurately detecting low-frequency mutations in both research and clinical settings. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2013-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3638140/ /pubmed/23382536 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.147686.112 Text en © 2013, Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
spellingShingle Method
Hiatt, Joseph B.
Pritchard, Colin C.
Salipante, Stephen J.
O'Roak, Brian J.
Shendure, Jay
Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
title Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
title_full Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
title_fullStr Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
title_full_unstemmed Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
title_short Single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
title_sort single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation
topic Method
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3638140/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23382536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.147686.112
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