Author:
Roberts Hannah E.,Lopopolo Maria,Pagnamenta Alistair T.,Sharma Eshita,Parkes Duncan,Lonie Lorne,Freeman Colin,Knight Samantha J. L.,Lunter Gerton,Dreau Helene,Lockstone Helen,Taylor Jenny C.,Schuh Anna,Bowden Rory,Buck David
Abstract
AbstractRecent advances in throughput and accuracy mean that the Oxford Nanopore Technologies PromethION platform is a now a viable solution for genome sequencing. Much of the validation of bioinformatic tools for this long-read data has focussed on calling germline variants (including structural variants). Somatic variants are outnumbered many-fold by germline variants and their detection is further complicated by the effects of tumour purity/subclonality. Here, we evaluate the extent to which Nanopore sequencing enables detection and analysis of somatic variation. We do this through sequencing tumour and germline genomes for a patient with diffuse B-cell lymphoma and comparing results with 150 bp short-read sequencing of the same samples. Calling germline single nucleotide variants (SNVs) from specific chromosomes of the long-read data achieved good specificity and sensitivity. However, results of somatic SNV calling highlight the need for the development of specialised joint calling algorithms. We find the comparative genome-wide performance of different tools varies significantly between structural variant types, and suggest long reads are especially advantageous for calling large somatic deletions and duplications. Finally, we highlight the utility of long reads for phasing clinically relevant variants, confirming that a somatic 1.6 Mb deletion and a p.(Arg249Met) mutation involving TP53 are oriented in trans.
Funder
Wellcome Trust
Health Innovation Challenge Fund
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
15 articles.
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