Allelic Ratios and the Mutational Landscape Reveal Biologically Significant Heterozygous SNVs

Author:

Chu Jeffrey S-C12,Johnsen Robert C2,Chua Shu Yi2,Tu Domena12,Dennison Mark2,Marra Marco3,Jones Steven J M123,Baillie David L2,Rose Ann M1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada

2. Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada

3. Genome Sciences Centre, British Columbia Cancer Research Centre, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4E6, Canada

Abstract

Abstract The issue of heterozygosity continues to be a challenge in the analysis of genome sequences. In this article, we describe the use of allele ratios to distinguish biologically significant single-nucleotide variants from background noise. An application of this approach is the identification of lethal mutations in Caenorhabditis elegans essential genes, which must be maintained by the presence of a wild-type allele on a balancer. The h448 allele of let-504 is rescued by the duplication balancer sDp2. We readily identified the extent of the duplication when the percentage of read support for the lesion was between 70 and 80%. Examination of the EMS-induced changes throughout the genome revealed that these mutations exist in contiguous blocks. During early embryonic division in self-fertilizing C. elegans, alkylated guanines pair with thymines. As a result, EMS-induced changes become fixed as either G→A or C→T changes along the length of the chromosome. Thus, examination of the distribution of EMS-induced changes revealed the mutational and recombinational history of the chromosome, even generations later. We identified the mutational change responsible for the h448 mutation and sequenced PCR products for an additional four alleles, correlating let-504 with the DNA-coding region for an ortholog of a NFκB-activating protein, NKAP. Our results confirm that whole-genome sequencing is an efficient and inexpensive way of identifying nucleotide alterations responsible for lethal phenotypes and can be applied on a large scale to identify the molecular basis of essential genes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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