Next-generation sequencing strategies enable routine detection of balanced chromosome rearrangements for clinical diagnostics and genetic research.

The contribution of balanced chromosomal rearrangements to complex disorders remains unclear because they are not detected routinely by genome-wide microarrays and clinical localization is imprecise. Failure to consider these events bypasses a potentially powerful complement to single nucleotide polymorphism and copy-number association approaches to complex disorders, where much of the heritability remains unexplained. To capitalize on this genetic resource, we have applied optimized sequencing and analysis strategies to test whether these potentially high-impact variants can be mapped at reasonable cost and throughput. By using a whole-genome multiplexing strategy, rearrangement breakpoints could be delineated at a fraction of the cost of standard sequencing. For rearrangements already mapped regionally by karyotyping and fluorescence in situ hybridization, a targeted approach enabled capture and sequencing of multiple breakpoints simultaneously. Importantly, this strategy permitted capture and unique alignment of up to 97% of repeat-masked sequences in the targeted regions. Genome-wide analyses estimate that only 3.7% of bases should be routinely omitted from genomic DNA capture experiments. Illustrating the power of these approaches, the rearrangement breakpoints were rapidly defined to base pair resolution and revealed unexpected sequence complexity, such as co-occurrence of inversion and translocation as an underlying feature of karyotypically balanced alterations. These findings have implications ranging from genome annotation to de novo assemblies and could enable sequencing screens for structural variations at a cost comparable to that of microarrays in standard clinical practice.

[1]  S. Nelson,et al.  Improving the efficiency of genomic loci capture using oligonucleotide arrays for high throughput resequencing , 2009, BMC Genomics.

[2]  Gonçalo R. Abecasis,et al.  The Sequence Alignment/Map format and SAMtools , 2009, Bioinform..

[3]  J. Shendure,et al.  Characterization of apparently balanced chromosomal rearrangements from the developmental genome anatomy project. , 2008, American journal of human genetics.

[4]  Edwin Cuppen,et al.  Mutation discovery by targeted genomic enrichment of multiplexed barcoded samples , 2010, Nature Methods.

[5]  Jamie K Teer,et al.  Systematic comparison of three genomic enrichment methods for massively parallel DNA sequencing. , 2010, Genome research.

[6]  Martin Vingron,et al.  Mapping translocation breakpoints by next-generation sequencing. , 2008, Genome research.

[7]  Reinhard Ullmann,et al.  Breakpoint analysis of balanced chromosome rearrangements by next-generation paired-end sequencing , 2010, European Journal of Human Genetics.

[8]  Richard Durbin,et al.  Sequence analysis Fast and accurate short read alignment with Burrows – Wheeler transform , 2009 .

[9]  J. Maguire,et al.  Solution Hybrid Selection with Ultra-long Oligonucleotides for Massively Parallel Targeted Sequencing , 2009, Nature Biotechnology.

[10]  Antony V. Cox,et al.  Identification of somatically acquired rearrangements in cancer using genome-wide massively parallel paired-end sequencing , 2008, Nature Genetics.

[11]  Leslie G Biesecker,et al.  Consensus statement: chromosomal microarray is a first-tier clinical diagnostic test for individuals with developmental disabilities or congenital anomalies. , 2010, American journal of human genetics.

[12]  B. Berger,et al.  ARACHNE: a whole-genome shotgun assembler. , 2002, Genome research.

[13]  J. Mullikin,et al.  SSAHA: a fast search method for large DNA databases. , 2001, Genome research.

[14]  Nancy F. Hansen,et al.  Accurate Whole Human Genome Sequencing using Reversible Terminator Chemistry , 2008, Nature.

[15]  Benjamin P. Blackburne,et al.  Mutation spectrum revealed by breakpoint sequencing of human germline CNVs , 2010, Nature Genetics.

[16]  R. Durbin,et al.  Mapping Quality Scores Mapping Short Dna Sequencing Reads and Calling Variants Using P

, 2022 .

[17]  Philip M. Kim,et al.  Paired-End Mapping Reveals Extensive Structural Variation in the Human Genome , 2007, Science.

[18]  M. Stratton,et al.  Constitutional translocation breakpoint mapping by genome-wide paired-end sequencing identifies HACE1 as a putative Wilms tumour susceptibility gene , 2009, Journal of Medical Genetics.

[19]  Emily H Turner,et al.  Target-enrichment strategies for next-generation sequencing , 2010, Nature Methods.

[20]  J. Jurka Repbase update: a database and an electronic journal of repetitive elements. , 2000, Trends in genetics : TIG.

[21]  Sharyn A. Lincoln,et al.  Clinical Genetic Testing for Patients With Autism Spectrum Disorders , 2010, Pediatrics.

[22]  J. Rowley Chromosome abnormalities in leukemia. , 1988, Haematology and blood transfusion.