AI Article Synopsis

  • A massive parallel sequencing approach has been developed for diagnosing inherited colorectal cancer (CRC) by quickly capturing and analyzing specific genetic sequences in 10 key genes linked to Mendelian CRC.
  • The sequencing was performed using advanced Illumina platforms and involved a comprehensive bioinformatics pipeline for precise mapping, variant calling, and structural variant detection.
  • The analysis of 1644 cases revealed a 20% detection rate of harmful genetic variants, which increased to 37% for Lynch syndrome patients, highlighting the method's effectiveness in identifying complex genetic alterations related to CRC.

Article Abstract

We have developed and validated for the diagnosis of inherited colorectal cancer (CRC) a massive parallel sequencing strategy based on: (i) fast capture of exonic and intronic sequences from ten genes involved in Mendelian forms of CRC (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, APC, MUTYH, STK11, SMAD4, BMPR1A and PTEN); (ii) sequencing on MiSeq and NextSeq 500 Illumina platforms; (iii) a bioinformatic pipeline that includes BWA-Picard-GATK (Broad Institute) and CASAVA (Illumina) in parallel for mapping and variant calling, Alamut Batch (Interactive BioSoftware) for annotation, CANOES for CNV detection and finally, chimeric reads analysis for the detection of other types of structural variants (SVs). Analysis of 1644 new index cases allowed the identification of 323 patients with class 4 or 5 variants, corresponding to a 20% disease-causing variant detection rate. This rate reached 37% in patients with Lynch syndrome, suspected on the basis of tumour analyses. Thanks to this strategy, we detected overlapping phenotypes (e.g., MUTYH biallelic mutations mimicking Lynch syndrome), mosaic alterations and complex SVs such as a genomic deletion involving the last BMPR1A exons and PTEN, an Alu insertion within MSH2 exon 8 and a mosaic deletion of STK11 exons 3-10. This strategy allows, in a single step, detection of all types of CRC gene alterations including SVs and provides a high disease-causing variant detection rate, thus optimizing the diagnosis of inherited CRC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6189188PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41431-018-0207-2DOI Listing

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