Impact of DNA source on genetic variant detection from human whole-genome sequencing data

Author:

Trost BrettORCID,Walker Susan,Haider Syed A,Sung Wilson W L,Pereira Sergio,Phillips Charly L,Higginbotham Edward JORCID,Strug Lisa J,Nguyen Charlotte,Raajkumar Akshaya,Szego Michael J,Marshall Christian R,Scherer Stephen W

Abstract

BackgroundWhole blood is currently the most common DNA source for whole-genome sequencing (WGS), but for studies requiring non-invasive collection, self-collection, greater sample stability or additional tissue references, saliva or buccal samples may be preferred. However, the relative quality of sequencing data and accuracy of genetic variant detection from blood-derived, saliva-derived and buccal-derived DNA need to be thoroughly investigated.MethodsMatched blood, saliva and buccal samples from four unrelated individuals were used to compare sequencing metrics and variant-detection accuracy among these DNA sources.ResultsWe observed significant differences among DNA sources for sequencing quality metrics such as percentage of reads aligned and mean read depth (p<0.05). Differences were negligible in the accuracy of detecting short insertions and deletions; however, the false positive rate for single nucleotide variation detection was slightly higher in some saliva and buccal samples. The sensitivity of copy number variant (CNV) detection was up to 25% higher in blood samples, depending on CNV size and type, and appeared to be worse in saliva and buccal samples with high bacterial concentration. We also show that methylation-based enrichment for eukaryotic DNA in saliva and buccal samples increased alignment rates but also reduced read-depth uniformity, hampering CNV detection.ConclusionFor WGS, we recommend using DNA extracted from blood rather than saliva or buccal swabs; if saliva or buccal samples are used, we recommend against using methylation-based eukaryotic DNA enrichment. All data used in this study are available for further open-science investigation.

Funder

Canada Foundation for Innovation

Canadian Institutes of Health Research Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship

GlaxoSmithKline-Canadian Institutes of Health Research Chair in Genome Sciences

The Hospital for Sick Children Foundation

Genome Canada

University of Toronto McLaughlin Centre

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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