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1.
Nat Methods ; 12(10): 966-8, 2015 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26258291

RESUMEN

SpeedSeq is an open-source genome analysis platform that accomplishes alignment, variant detection and functional annotation of a 50× human genome in 13 h on a low-cost server and alleviates a bioinformatics bottleneck that typically demands weeks of computation with extensive hands-on expert involvement. SpeedSeq offers performance competitive with or superior to current methods for detecting germline and somatic single-nucleotide variants, structural variants, insertions and deletions, and it includes novel functionality for streamlined interpretation.


Asunto(s)
Genoma Humano , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento/métodos , Anotación de Secuencia Molecular/métodos , Programas Informáticos , Variación Genética , Humanos , Neoplasias/genética , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Medicina de Precisión/métodos , Flujo de Trabajo
2.
Genome Res ; 23(5): 762-76, 2013 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23410887

RESUMEN

Tumor genomes are generally thought to evolve through a gradual accumulation of mutations, but the observation that extraordinarily complex rearrangements can arise through single mutational events suggests that evolution may be accelerated by punctuated changes in genome architecture. To assess the prevalence and origins of complex genomic rearrangements (CGRs), we mapped 6179 somatic structural variation breakpoints in 64 cancer genomes from seven tumor types and screened for clusters of three or more interconnected breakpoints. We find that complex breakpoint clusters are extremely common: 154 clusters comprise 25% of all somatic breakpoints, and 75% of tumors exhibit at least one complex cluster. Based on copy number state profiling, 63% of breakpoint clusters are consistent with being CGRs that arose through a single mutational event. CGRs have diverse architectures including focal breakpoint clusters, large-scale rearrangements joining clusters from one or more chromosomes, and staggeringly complex chromothripsis events. Notably, chromothripsis has a significantly higher incidence in glioblastoma samples (39%) relative to other tumor types (9%). Chromothripsis breakpoints also show significantly elevated intra-tumor allele frequencies relative to simple SVs, which indicates that they arise early during tumorigenesis or confer selective advantage. Finally, assembly and analysis of 4002 somatic and 6982 germline breakpoint sequences reveal that somatic breakpoints show significantly less microhomology and fewer templated insertions than germline breakpoints, and this effect is stronger at CGRs than at simple variants. These results are inconsistent with replication-based models of CGR genesis and strongly argue that nonhomologous repair of concurrently arising DNA double-strand breaks is the predominant mechanism underlying complex cancer genome rearrangements.


Asunto(s)
Aberraciones Cromosómicas , Puntos de Rotura del Cromosoma , Mutación/genética , Neoplasias/genética , Secuencia de Bases , Roturas del ADN de Doble Cadena , Replicación del ADN/genética , Genoma Humano , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento , Humanos , Neoplasias/patología
3.
Bioinformatics ; 30(17): 2503-5, 2014 Sep 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24812344

RESUMEN

MOTIVATION: Illumina DNA sequencing is now the predominant source of raw genomic data, and data volumes are growing rapidly. Bioinformatic analysis pipelines are having trouble keeping pace. A common bottleneck in such pipelines is the requirement to read, write, sort and compress large BAM files multiple times. RESULTS: We present SAMBLASTER, a tool that reduces the number of times such costly operations are performed. SAMBLASTER is designed to mark duplicates in read-sorted SAM files as a piped post-pass on DNA aligner output before it is compressed to BAM. In addition, it can simultaneously output into separate files the discordant read-pairs and/or split-read mappings used for structural variant calling. As an alignment post-pass, its own runtime overhead is negligible, while dramatically reducing overall pipeline complexity and runtime. As a stand-alone duplicate marking tool, it performs significantly better than PICARD or SAMBAMBA in terms of both speed and memory usage, while achieving nearly identical results. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: SAMBLASTER is open-source C+ + code and freely available for download from https://github.com/GregoryFaust/samblaster.


Asunto(s)
Variación Estructural del Genoma , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN/métodos , Programas Informáticos , Genómica/métodos , Alineación de Secuencia
4.
Bioinformatics ; 28(19): 2417-24, 2012 Oct 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22829624

RESUMEN

MOTIVATION: With improved short-read assembly algorithms and the recent development of long-read sequencers, split mapping will soon be the preferred method for structural variant (SV) detection. Yet, current alignment tools are not well suited for this. RESULTS: We present YAHA, a fast and flexible hash-based aligner. YAHA is as fast and accurate as BWA-SW at finding the single best alignment per query and is dramatically faster and more sensitive than both SSAHA2 and MegaBLAST at finding all possible alignments. Unlike other aligners that report all, or one, alignment per query, or that use simple heuristics to select alignments, YAHA uses a directed acyclic graph to find the optimal set of alignments that cover a query using a biologically relevant breakpoint penalty. YAHA can also report multiple mappings per defined segment of the query. We show that YAHA detects more breakpoints in less time than BWA-SW across all SV classes, and especially excels at complex SVs comprising multiple breakpoints. AVAILABILITY: YAHA is currently supported on 64-bit Linux systems. Binaries and sample data are freely available for download from http://faculty.virginia.edu/irahall/YAHA. CONTACT: imh4y@virginia.edu.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Biología Computacional/métodos , Alineación de Secuencia/métodos , Secuencia de Bases , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN
6.
Neuron ; 89(6): 1223-1236, 2016 Mar 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26948891

RESUMEN

Somatic mutation in neurons is linked to neurologic disease and implicated in cell-type diversification. However, the origin, extent, and patterns of genomic mutation in neurons remain unknown. We established a nuclear transfer method to clonally amplify the genomes of neurons from adult mice for whole-genome sequencing. Comprehensive mutation detection and independent validation revealed that individual neurons harbor ∼100 unique mutations from all classes but lack recurrent rearrangements. Most neurons contain at least one gene-disrupting mutation and rare (0-2) mobile element insertions. The frequency and gene bias of neuronal mutations differ from other lineages, potentially due to novel mechanisms governing postmitotic mutation. Fertile mice were cloned from several neurons, establishing the compatibility of mutated adult neuronal genomes with reprogramming to pluripotency and development.


Asunto(s)
Clonación Molecular , Mutación/genética , Neuronas/fisiología , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , Factores de Edad , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Proteínas Relacionadas con las Cadherinas , Cadherinas/genética , Cadherinas/metabolismo , División Celular/genética , Elementos Transponibles de ADN/genética , Embrión de Mamíferos , Femenino , Humanos , Antígeno Ki-67/metabolismo , Ratones , Ratones Transgénicos , Repeticiones de Microsatélite/genética , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/genética , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/metabolismo , Técnicas de Transferencia Nuclear , Bulbo Olfatorio/citología , Bulbo Olfatorio/embriología , Bulbo Olfatorio/crecimiento & desarrollo , Oocitos/fisiología
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