| Literature DB >> 23758813 |
Maciej Sykulski1, Tomasz Gambin, Magdalena Bartnik, Katarzyna Derwińska, Barbara Wiśniowiecka-Kowalnik, Paweł Stankiewicz, Anna Gambin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: DNA copy number variations (CNV) constitute an important source of genetic variability. The standard method used for CNV detection is array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH).Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23758813 PMCID: PMC3691624 DOI: 10.1186/2043-9113-3-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Bioinforma ISSN: 2043-9113
Figure 1Processing of logratio data. In each subfigure, rows corresponds to samples and columns to probes. On the left: the effect of rank transformation; the same fragment of the genome represented by logratios (a) and their column ranks (b). The wave pattern is eliminated, while true signal (clear deletion) is strengthen. On the right: the polymorphic region in the middle is surrounded by wave patterns and only one significant deletion is visible (c); markers found by our algorithm indicate only deleted segment, all other spurious signals are ignored (d).
Figure 2Rare CNVs detected by our method in 366 samples. Figure shows the chromosmal location of all segments reported by experts (red), segments predicted by our method (yellow) as well as pathogenic CNVs reported in ISCA (purple) and genes from GAD (blue).
Figure 3Evaluation of CNVs detection results.(a) The enrichment curve for a density score with respect to the segments already reported as pathogenic or of uncertain significance. (b) Venn diagram for the predicted rare CNVs (Predicted), confirmed as pathogenic or uncertain (Reported), segments significantly overlapping with DGV (DGV), segments with GAD genes (GAD), and segments selected as polymorphisms according to polymorphic profile (Polymorphisms).
Selected predicted best scored CNVs confirmed later as pathogenic changes
| 1 | Del | 1q43q44 | 3.3 | 166 | 100% | 24 | — | Mental retardation |
| 2 | Del | 3q13.2q13.31 | 4.5 | 154 | 99% | 4 | 2 | Autism |
| 3 | Del | Xp22.12 | 1.6 | 100 | 95% | 53 | 1 | Mental retardation |
| 4 | Del | 17q21.31 | 0.3 | 84 | 96% | 23 | 3 | Mental retardation |
| 5 | Del | 5q14.3q15 | 5.4 | 596 | 95% | 5 | — | Mental retardation |
| 6 | Del | Xq22.1q22.3 | 5.2 | 167 | 91% | 51 | 2 | Mental retardation |
| 7 | Del | 2q37.2q37.3 | 6.3 | 736 | 88% | 19 | 2 | Mental retardation |
| 8 | Del | 15q13.3q14 | 8 | 873 | 87% | 2 | 2 | Mental retardation |
Selected predicted best scored variants of unkown significance
| 1 | Del | 8q22.2 | 0.25 | 56 | 100% | 5 | Autism |
| 2 | Del | 5q35.3 | 0.7 | 27 | 93% | 6 | Mental retardation |
| 3 | Dup | 3p26.3 | 0.33 | 21 | 90% | 10 | Mental retardation |
| 4 | Dup | 12q24.32 | 0.4 | 9 | 88% | 7 | Mental retardation |
| 5 | Dup | 4q28.2 | 0.12 | 77 | 87% | 6 | Mental retardation |
| 6 | Dup | 3p22.3 | 1.2 | 30 | 83% | 4 | Autism |
| 7 | Dup | 6q25.3 | 0.9 | 17 | 82% | 4 | Mental retardation |
| 8 | Del | 4q21.23q21.3 | 0.95 | 22 | 81% | 4 | Autism |
Figure 4The distribution of lengths of detected CNVs. Green bars correspond to the distribution of lengths of all detected segments. Blue bars indicate to the frequencies of common CNVs or false positive segments, while red bars represent segments predicted as rare CNVs.