TY - JOUR
T1 - A national long-read sequencing study on chromosomal rearrangements uncovers hidden complexities
AU - Eisfeldt, Jesper
AU - Ameur, Adam
AU - Lenner, Felix
AU - Berk de Boer, Esmee Ten
AU - Ek, Marlene
AU - Wincent, Josephine
AU - Vaz, Raquel
AU - Ottosson, Jesper
AU - Jonson, Tord
AU - Ivarsson, Sofie
AU - Thunström, Sofia
AU - Topa, Alexandra
AU - Stenberg, Simon
AU - Rohlin, Anna
AU - Sandestig, Anna
AU - Nordling, Margareta
AU - Palmebäck, Pia
AU - Burstedt, Magnus
AU - Nordin, Frida
AU - Stattin, Eva Lena
AU - Sobol, Maria
AU - Baliakas, Panagiotis
AU - Bondeson, Marie Louise
AU - Höijer, Ida
AU - Saether, Kristine Bilgrav
AU - Lovmar, Lovisa
AU - Ehrencrona, Hans
AU - Melin, Malin
AU - Feuk, Lars
AU - Lindstrand, Anna
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Clinical genetic laboratories often require a comprehensive analysis of chromosomal rearrangements/structural variants (SVs), from large events like translocations and inversions to supernumerary ring/marker chromosomes and small deletions or duplications. Understanding the complexity of these events and their clinical consequences requires pinpointing breakpoint junctions and resolving the derivative chromosome structure. This task often surpasses the capabilities of short-read sequencing technologies. In contrast, long-read sequencing techniques present a compelling alternative for clinical diagnostics. Here, Genomic Medicine Sweden—Rare Diseases has explored the utility of HiFi Revio long-read genome sequencing (lrGS) for digital karyotyping of SVs nationwide. The 16 samples from 13 families were collected from all Swedish healthcare regions. Prior investigations had identified 16 SVs, ranging from simple to complex rearrangements, including inversions, translocations, and copy number variants. We have established a national pipeline and a shared variant database for variant calling and filtering. Using lrGS, 14 of the 16 known SVs are detected. Of these, 13 are mapped at nucleotide resolution, and one complex rearrangement is only visible by read depth. Two Chromosome 21 rearrangements, one mosaic, remain undetected. Average read lengths are 8.3–18.8 kb with coverage exceeding 20× for all samples. De novo assembly results in a limited number of phased contigs per individual (N50 6–86 Mb), enabling direct characterization of the chromosomal rearrangements. In a national pilot study, we demonstrate the utility of HiFi Revio lrGS for analyzing chromosomal rearrangements. Based on our results, we propose a 5-year plan to expand lrGS use for rare disease diagnostics in Sweden.
AB - Clinical genetic laboratories often require a comprehensive analysis of chromosomal rearrangements/structural variants (SVs), from large events like translocations and inversions to supernumerary ring/marker chromosomes and small deletions or duplications. Understanding the complexity of these events and their clinical consequences requires pinpointing breakpoint junctions and resolving the derivative chromosome structure. This task often surpasses the capabilities of short-read sequencing technologies. In contrast, long-read sequencing techniques present a compelling alternative for clinical diagnostics. Here, Genomic Medicine Sweden—Rare Diseases has explored the utility of HiFi Revio long-read genome sequencing (lrGS) for digital karyotyping of SVs nationwide. The 16 samples from 13 families were collected from all Swedish healthcare regions. Prior investigations had identified 16 SVs, ranging from simple to complex rearrangements, including inversions, translocations, and copy number variants. We have established a national pipeline and a shared variant database for variant calling and filtering. Using lrGS, 14 of the 16 known SVs are detected. Of these, 13 are mapped at nucleotide resolution, and one complex rearrangement is only visible by read depth. Two Chromosome 21 rearrangements, one mosaic, remain undetected. Average read lengths are 8.3–18.8 kb with coverage exceeding 20× for all samples. De novo assembly results in a limited number of phased contigs per individual (N50 6–86 Mb), enabling direct characterization of the chromosomal rearrangements. In a national pilot study, we demonstrate the utility of HiFi Revio lrGS for analyzing chromosomal rearrangements. Based on our results, we propose a 5-year plan to expand lrGS use for rare disease diagnostics in Sweden.
U2 - 10.1101/gr.279510.124
DO - 10.1101/gr.279510.124
M3 - Article
C2 - 39472022
AN - SCOPUS:85209737616
SN - 1088-9051
VL - 34
SP - 1774
EP - 1784
JO - Genome Research
JF - Genome Research
IS - 11
ER -