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Expectations and blind spots for structural variation detection from long-read assemblies and short-read genome sequencing technologies

Title
Expectations and blind spots for structural variation detection from long-read assemblies and short-read genome sequencing technologies
Authors
Zhao X.Collins R.L.Lee W.-P.Weber A.M.Jun Y.Zhu Q.Weisburd B.Huang Y.Audano P.A.Wang H.Walker M.Lowther C.Fu J.Gerstein M.B.Devine S.E.Marschall T.Korbel J.O.Eichler E.E.Chaisson M.J.P.Lee C.Mills R.E.Brand H.Talkowski M.E.Human Genome Structural Variation Consortium
Ewha Authors
Charles Lee
SCOPUS Author ID
Charles Leescopusscopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
American Journal of Human Genetics
ISSN
0002-9297JCR Link
Citation
American Journal of Human Genetics vol. 108, no. 5, pp. 919 - 928
Keywords
copy number variationgenome assemblylong-read technologysegmental duplicationsimple repeatsstructural variationwhole-genome sequencing
Publisher
Cell Press
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Virtually all genome sequencing efforts in national biobanks, complex and Mendelian disease programs, and medical genetic initiatives are reliant upon short-read whole-genome sequencing (srWGS), which presents challenges for the detection of structural variants (SVs) relative to emerging long-read WGS (lrWGS) technologies. Given this ubiquity of srWGS in large-scale genomics initiatives, we sought to establish expectations for routine SV detection from this data type by comparison with lrWGS assembly, as well as to quantify the genomic properties and added value of SVs uniquely accessible to each technology. Analyses from the Human Genome Structural Variation Consortium (HGSVC) of three families captured ~11,000 SVs per genome from srWGS and ~25,000 SVs per genome from lrWGS assembly. Detection power and precision for SV discovery varied dramatically by genomic context and variant class: 9.7% of the current GRCh38 reference is defined by segmental duplication (SD) and simple repeat (SR), yet 91.4% of deletions that were specifically discovered by lrWGS localized to these regions. Across the remaining 90.3% of reference sequence, we observed extremely high (93.8%) concordance between technologies for deletions in these datasets. In contrast, lrWGS was superior for detection of insertions across all genomic contexts. Given that non-SD/SR sequences encompass 95.9% of currently annotated disease-associated exons, improved sensitivity from lrWGS to discover novel pathogenic deletions in these currently interpretable genomic regions is likely to be incremental. However, these analyses highlight the considerable added value of assembly-based lrWGS to create new catalogs of insertions and transposable elements, as well as disease-associated repeat expansions in genomic sequences that were previously recalcitrant to routine assessment. © 2021
DOI
10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.03.014
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자연과학대학 > 생명과학전공 > Journal papers
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