4.4 Article

Rare Event Detection Using Error-corrected DNA and RNA Sequencing

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 138, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/57509

Keywords

Genetics; Issue 138; Rare event detection; error-corrected sequencing; bioinformatics; genomics; early detection; molecular tagging

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [UM1 CA186107, RO1 CA49449, RO1 CA149445]
  2. Children's Discovery Institute of Washington University
  3. St. Louis Children's Hospital [MC-II-2015-461]
  4. Eli Seth Matthews Leukemia Foundation

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Conventional next-generation sequencing techniques (NGS) have allowed for immense genomic characterization for over a decade. Specifically, NGS has been used to analyze the spectrum of clonal mutations in malignancy. Though far more efficient than traditional Sanger methods, NGS struggles with identifying rare clonal and subclonal mutations due to its high error rate of -0.5-2.0%. Thus, standard NGS has a limit of detection for mutations that are >0.02 variant allele fraction (VAF). While the clinical significance for mutations this rare in patients without known disease remains unclear, patients treated for leukemia have significantly improved outcomes when residual disease is <0.0001 by flow cytometry. In order to mitigate this artefactual background of NGS, numerous methods have been developed. Here we describe a method for Error-corrected DNA and RNA Sequencing (ECS), which involves tagging individual molecules with both a 16 bp random index for error-correction and an 8 bp patient-specific index for multiplexing. Our method can detect and track clonal mutations at variant allele fractions (VAFs) two orders of magnitude lower than the detection limit of NGS and as rare as 0.0001 VAF.

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