| Literature DB >> 24998187 |
Desheng Liang1, Ying Peng1, Weigang Lv1, Linbei Deng1, Yanghui Zhang1, Haoxian Li1, Pu Yang1, Jianguang Zhang2, Zhuo Song2, Genming Xu2, David S Cram3, Lingqian Wu4.
Abstract
Detection of chromosome copy number variation (CNV) plays an important role in the diagnosis of patients with unexplained clinical symptoms and for the identification of chromosome disease syndromes in the established fetus. In current clinical practice, karyotyping, in conjunction with array-based methods, is the gold standard for detection of CNV. To increase accessibility and reduce patient costs for diagnostic CNV tests, we speculated that next-generation sequencing methods could provide a similar degree of sensitivity and specificity as commercial arrays. CNV in patient samples was assessed on a medium-density single nucleotide polymorphism array and by low-coverage massively parallel CNV sequencing (CNV-seq), with mate pair sequencing used to confirm selected CNV deletion breakpoints. A total of 10 ng of input DNA was sufficient for accurate CNV-seq diagnosis, although 50 ng was optimal. Validation studies of samples with small CNVs showed that CNV-seq was specific and reproducible, suggesting that CNV-seq may have a potential genome resolution of approximately 0.1 Mb. In a blinded study of 72 samples with known gross and submicroscopic CNVs originally detected by single nucleotide polymorphism array, there was high diagnostic concordance with CNV-seq. We conclude that CNV-seq is a viable alternative to arrays for the diagnosis of chromosome disease syndromes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24998187 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2014.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Diagn ISSN: 1525-1578 Impact factor: 5.568