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Comprehensive long-span paired-end-tag mapping reveals characteristic patterns of structural variations in epithelial cancer genomes
Author(s) -
Axel M. Hillmer,
Fei Yao,
Koichiro Inaki,
Wah Heng Lee,
Pramila Ariyaratne,
Audrey S.M. Teo,
Xing Yi Woo,
Zhenshui Zhang,
Hao Zhao,
Leena Ukil,
Jieqi P. Chen,
Feng Zhu,
Jimmy Bok Yan So,
Manuel SaltoTellez,
Wan Ting Poh,
Kelson Folkvard Braaten Zawack,
Niranjan Nagarajan,
Song Gao,
Guoliang Li,
Vikrant Kumar,
Hui Lim,
Yee Yen Sia,
Chee Seng Chan,
See Ting Leong,
Say Chuan Neo,
Poh Sum D. Choi,
Hervé Thoreau,
Patrick Tan,
Atif Shahab,
Xiaoan Ruan,
Jonas Bergh,
Per Hall,
Valère Cacheux-Rataboul,
ChiaLin Wei,
Khay Guan Yeoh,
WingKin Sung,
Guillaume Bourque,
Edison T. Liu,
Yijun Ruan
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.113555.110
Subject(s) - biology , genome , genetics , segmental duplication , breakpoint , genome instability , chromothripsis , somatic cell , computational biology , human genome , structural variation , dna , chromosomal translocation , gene , dna damage , gene family
Somatic genome rearrangements are thought to play important roles in cancer development. We optimized a long-span paired-end-tag (PET) sequencing approach using 10-Kb genomic DNA inserts to study human genome structural variations (SVs). The use of a 10-Kb insert size allows the identification of breakpoints within repetitive or homology-containing regions of a few kilobases in size and results in a higher physical coverage compared with small insert libraries with the same sequencing effort. We have applied this approach to comprehensively characterize the SVs of 15 cancer and two noncancer genomes and used a filtering approach to strongly enrich for somatic SVs in the cancer genomes. Our analyses revealed that most inversions, deletions, and insertions are germ-line SVs, whereas tandem duplications, unpaired inversions, interchromosomal translocations, and complex rearrangements are over-represented among somatic rearrangements in cancer genomes. We demonstrate that the quantitative and connective nature of DNA–PET data is precise in delineating the genealogy of complex rearrangement events, we observe signatures that are compatible with breakage-fusion-bridge cycles, and we discover that large duplications are among the initial rearrangements that trigger genome instability for extensive amplification in epithelial cancers.

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