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New technology used to construct the first map of structural variation in the human genome

11/23/2006

Methods also applicable to disease diagnosis, drug response tests


Thurs., Nov. 23, 2006 – Beyond the simple stream of one-letter characters in the human genome sequence lies a complex, higher-order code. In order to decipher this level of architecture, scientists have developed powerful new experimental and algorithmic methods to detect copy number variants (CNVs)—defined as large deletions and duplications of DNA segments. These technologies—reported today in the journal Genome Research—were used to create the first comprehensive map of CNVs in the human genome, concurrently published in Nature.

CNVs are responsible for genetic changes in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, susceptibility to HIV-1, some forms of color blindness, and many other diseases. They lead to variation in gene expression levels and may account for a large amount of phenotypic variation among individuals and ethnic populations, including differential responses to drugs and environmental stimuli. Mechanisms underlying the formation of CNVs also provide insight into evolutionary processes and human origins.

Using microarray technology, scientists can scan for CNVs across the genome in a single experiment. While this is a cost-effective means of obtaining large amounts of data, scientists have struggled to accurately determine CNV copy number and to precisely define the boundaries of CNVs in the genome. Two papers published today in Genome Research present groundbreaking approaches to address these issues.

One paper describes a new whole-genome tiling path microarray, which was constructed from the same DNA used to sequence the human genome in 2001. The array covers 93.7% of the euchromatic (gene-containing) regions of the human genome and substantially improves resolution over previous arrays. The array was employed in a process known as comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), which involves tagging genomic DNA from two individuals and then co-hybridizing it to the array. Data from the array were assessed with a new algorithmic tool, called CNVfinder, which accurately and reliably identified CNVs in the human genome.

"This method helped us to develop the first comprehensive map of structural variation in the human genome," says Dr. Nigel Carter, one of the lead investigators on the project. "We used it to help identify 1,447 CNVs, which covered 12% of the human genome."

The other paper presents a new multi-step algorithm used with the Affymetrix GeneChip� Human Mapping 500K Early Access SNP arrays. The specificity of the algorithm, coupled with the increased probe density of these arrays, permitted the identification of approximately 1,000 CNVs, many of which were below the detection size limit of alternative methodologies. Furthermore, the algorithm more accurately estimated CNV boundaries, thereby permitting a detailed comparison with other genomic features.

"This new approach will be useful in understanding the role of CNVs in disease pathology—not only copy number changes in cancer cells, but also possible association of CNVs with common diseases," explains Dr. Hiroyuki Aburatani, one of the scientists who led the development of the algorithm. "We'll be able to develop diagnostic tests with sub-microscopic resolution, and because the analysis detects SNPs—single-nucleotide polymorphisms—in addition to CNVs, it will find widespread use among researchers performing disease-association studies."

Both projects were part of the International Structural Genomic Variation Consortium's Copy Number Variation Project (www.sanger.ac.uk/humgen/cnv). The Principal Investigators on this project were Hiroyuki Aburatani (University of Tokyo); Nigel P. Carter, Matthew E. Hurles, and Chris Tyler-Smith (Sanger Institute); Keith W. Jones (Affymetrix); Charles Lee (Harvard Medical School); and Stephen W. Scherer (Sick Kids Hospital, Toronto, Canada).

MEDIA CONTACTS: Interested reporters may obtain pre-print copies of the manuscripts from Peggy Calicchia, Editorial Secretary, Genome Research ([email protected]; +1-516-422-4012). Dr. Nigel P. Carter ([email protected]; +44-1223-491919) and Dr. Hiroyuki Aburatani ([email protected]; +81-3-5452-5352), corresponding authors on their respective papers (see below), have agreed to be contacted for additional information. The full citations are as follows:

Fiegler, H., Redon, R., Andrews, D., Scott, C., Andrews, R., Carder, C., Clark, R., Dovey, O., Ellis, P., Feuk, L., French, L., Hunt, P., Kalaitzopoulos, D., Larkin, J., Montgomery, L., Perry, G.H., Plumb, B.W., Porter, K., Rigby, R.E., Rigler, D., Valsesia, A., Langford, C., Humphray, S.J., Scherer, S.W., Lee, C., Hurles, M.E., and Carter, N.P. 2006. Accurate and reliable high-throughput detection of copy number variation in the human genome. Genome Res. 16: 1566-1574. [DOI: 10.1101/gr.5630906]

Komura, D., Shen, F., Ishikawa, S., Fitch, K.R., Chen, W., Zhang, J., Liu, G., Ihara, S., Nakamura, H., Hurles, M.E., Lee, C., Scherer, S.W., Jones, K.W., Shapero, M.H., Huang, J., and Aburatani, H. 2006. Genome-wide detection of human copy number variations using high-density DNA oligonucleotide arrays. Genome Res. 16: 1575-1584. [DOI: 10.1101/gr.5629106]

Please contact Dr. Helen Jamison ([email protected]), Assistant Press Officer at Nature, for copies of the Nature and Nature Genetics papers.

ABOUT GENOME RESEARCH: Genome Research (www.genome.org) is an international, continuously published, peer-reviewed journal published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Launched in 1995, it is one of the five most highly cited primary research journals in genetics and genomics.

ABOUT COLD SPRING HARBOR LABORATORY PRESS: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press is an internationally renowned publisher of books, journals, and electronic media, located on Long Island, New York. It is a division of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, an innovator in life science research and the education of scientists, students, and the public. For more information, visit www.cshlpress.com.

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