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DOI: 10.1038/ng.128
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Identification of somatically acquired rearrangements in cancer using genome-wide massively parallel paired-end sequencing

Peter J. Campbell,Philip J. Stephens,Erin Pleasance,Sarah O’Meara,Heng Li,Thomas Santarius,Lucy Stebbings,Catherine Leroy,Sarah Edkins,Claire Hardy,Jon Teague,Andrew Menzies,Ian Goodhead,Daniel J. Turner,Christopher M. Clee,Michael A. Quail,Antony V. Cox,Clive Brown,Richard Durbin,Matthew E. Hurles,Paul A.W. Edwards,Graham R. Bignell,Michael R. Stratton,P. Andrew Futreal

Biology
Genome
Genetics
2008
Human cancers often carry many somatically acquired genomic rearrangements, some of which may be implicated in cancer development. However, conventional strategies for characterizing rearrangements are laborious and low-throughput and have low sensitivity or poor resolution. We used massively parallel sequencing to generate sequence reads from both ends of short DNA fragments derived from the genomes of two individuals with lung cancer. By investigating read pairs that did not align correctly with respect to each other on the reference human genome, we characterized 306 germline structural variants and 103 somatic rearrangements to the base-pair level of resolution. The patterns of germline and somatic rearrangement were markedly different. Many somatic rearrangements were from amplicons, although rearrangements outside these regions, notably including tandem duplications, were also observed. Some somatic rearrangements led to abnormal transcripts, including two from internal tandem duplications and two fusion transcripts created by interchromosomal rearrangements. Germline variants were predominantly mediated by retrotransposition, often involving AluY and LINE elements. The results demonstrate the feasibility of systematic, genome-wide characterization of rearrangements in complex human cancer genomes, raising the prospect of a new harvest of genes associated with cancer using this strategy.
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    Identification of somatically acquired rearrangements in cancer using genome-wide massively parallel paired-end sequencing” is a paper by Peter J. Campbell Philip J. Stephens Erin Pleasance Sarah O’Meara Heng Li Thomas Santarius Lucy Stebbings Catherine Leroy Sarah Edkins Claire Hardy Jon Teague Andrew Menzies Ian Goodhead Daniel J. Turner Christopher M. Clee Michael A. Quail Antony V. Cox Clive Brown Richard Durbin Matthew E. Hurles Paul A.W. Edwards Graham R. Bignell Michael R. Stratton P. Andrew Futreal published in 2008. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.