High-resolution genomic profiling of chromosomal aberrations using Infinium whole-genome genotyping
Author(s) -
Daniel A. Peiffer,
Jennie Le,
Frank J. Steemers,
Weihua Chang,
Tony Jenniges,
Francisco GarcíaGarcía,
Kirt Haden,
Jiangzhen Li,
Chad A. Shaw,
John W. Belmont,
Sau Wai Cheung,
Richard Shen,
David Barker,
Kevin L. Gunderson
Publication year - 2006
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.5402306
Subject(s) - genotyping , loss of heterozygosity , biology , molecular inversion probe , snp array , genetics , snp genotyping , genome , copy number analysis , snp , copy number variation , chromosome , single nucleotide polymorphism , computational biology , genotype , allele , gene
Array-CGH is a powerful tool for the detection of chromosomal aberrations. The introduction of high-density SNP genotyping technology to genomic profiling, termed SNP-CGH, represents a further advance, since simultaneous measurement of both signal intensity variations and changes in allelic composition makes it possible to detect both copy number changes and copy-neutral loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) events. We demonstrate the utility of SNP-CGH with two Infinium whole-genome genotyping BeadChips, assaying 109,000 and 317,000 SNP loci, to detect chromosomal aberrations in samples bearing constitutional aberrations as well tumor samples at sub-100 kb effective resolution. Detected aberrations include homozygous deletions, hemizygous deletions, copy-neutral LOH, duplications, and amplifications. The statistical ability to detect common aberrations was modeled by analysis of an X chromosome titration model system, and sensitivity was modeled by titration of gDNA from a tumor cell with that of its paired normal cell line. Analysis was facilitated by using a genome browser that plots log ratios of normalized intensities and allelic ratios along the chromosomes. We developed two modes of SNP-CGH analysis, a single sample and a paired sample mode. The single sample mode computes log intensity ratios and allelic ratios by referencing to canonical genotype clusters generated from approximately 120 reference samples, whereas the paired sample mode uses a paired normal reference sample from the same individual. Finally, the two analysis modes are compared and contrasted for their utility in analyzing different types of input gDNA: low input amounts, fragmented gDNA, and Phi29 whole-genome pre-amplified DNA.
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