Abstract
SummaryThe capacity to resolve structural variants (SVs) at sequence resolution in highly repetitive genomic regions has long been intractable. Consequently, the properties, origins, and functional effects of multiple classes of complex rearrangement are unknown. To resolve these challenges, we leveraged recent technical milestones: 1) Oxford-Nanopore (ONT) sequencing; 2) the gapless Telomere-to-Telomere (T2T) genome assembly; and 3) a novel tool to discover large-scale rearrangements from long-reads. We applied these technologies across 13 patients with ring chromosomes, Robertsonian translocations, and complex balanced SVs that were unresolved by short-read sequencing. We resolved 10 of 13 events, including ring chromosomes, the complex SVs, and a Robertsonian translocation. Multiple breakpoints were localized to highly repetitive regions inaccessible to short-read alignment, such as acrocentric p-arms, ribosomal DNA arrays, and telomeric repeats, and involved complex structures such as a deletion-inversion and interchromosomal dispersed duplications. We also leveraged ONT native methylation detection to discover phased differential methylation in a gene promoter proximal to a ring fusion site, suggesting a long-range positional effect with heterochromatin spreading. Breakpoint sequences were consistent with common mechanisms of SV formation, including microhomology-mediated mechanisms, non-homologous end-joining, and non-allelic homologous recombination. These methods provide some of the first glimpses into the sequence resolution of ring chromosomes and Robertsonian translocations and illuminate the structural diversity of chromosomal rearrangements with implications for molecular diagnosis and genome biology.HighlightsCryptic rearrangements revealed in repetitive and previously inaccessible regionsAligning long-reads to telomere-to-telomere assembly enabled breakpoint discoveryFirst sequence resolution of a Robertsonian translocation breakpointHaplotype-specific methylation changes associated with ring formationGraphical abstract
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory