Mosaic autosomal aneuploidies are detectable from single-cell RNAseq data.

BMC Genomics

Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, University of Cambridge, CB2 0RE, Cambridge, UK.

Published: November 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Aneuploidies are common in cancer and certain genetic diseases, but detecting them in single cells has been a challenge due to slow and costly methods.* -
  • The authors introduced a new method that leverages chromosome-wide expression imbalances from single-cell RNA sequencing to quickly and accurately identify aneuploidies.* -
  • Their approach is efficient and cost-effective, although it may struggle with datasets where gene expression varies widely, allowing for better analysis of the implications of aneuploidy.*

Article Abstract

Background: Aneuploidies are copy number variants that affect entire chromosomes. They are seen commonly in cancer, embryonic stem cells, human embryos, and in various trisomic diseases. Aneuploidies frequently affect only a subset of cells in a sample; this is known as "mosaic" aneuploidy. A cell that harbours an aneuploidy exhibits disrupted gene expression patterns which can alter its behaviour. However, detection of aneuploidies using conventional single-cell DNA-sequencing protocols is slow and expensive.

Methods: We have developed a method that uses chromosome-wide expression imbalances to identify aneuploidies from single-cell RNA-seq data. The method provides quantitative aneuploidy calls, and is integrated into an R software package available on GitHub and as an Additional file of this manuscript.

Results: We validate our approach using data with known copy number, identifying the vast majority of aneuploidies with a low rate of false discovery. We show further support for the method's efficacy by exploiting allele-specific gene expression levels, and differential expression analyses.

Conclusions: The method is quick and easy to apply, straightforward to interpret, and represents a substantial cost saving compared to single-cell genome sequencing techniques. However, the method is less well suited to data where gene expression is highly variable. The results obtained from the method can be used to investigate the consequences of aneuploidy itself, or to exclude aneuploidy-affected expression values from conventional scRNA-seq data analysis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5702132PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-017-4253-xDOI Listing

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