Next-generation sequencing-based detection of germline L1-mediated transductions.

Tica, Jelena, Eunjung Lee, Andreas Untergasser, Sascha Meiers, David A Garfield, Omer Gokcumen, Eileen E M Furlong, Peter J Park, Adrian M Stütz, and Jan O Korbel. 2016. “Next-Generation Sequencing-Based Detection of Germline L1-Mediated Transductions.”. BMC Genomics 17: 342.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: While active LINE-1 (L1) elements possess the ability to mobilize flanking sequences to different genomic loci through a process termed transduction influencing genomic content and structure, an approach for detecting polymorphic germline non-reference transductions in massively-parallel sequencing data has been lacking.

RESULTS: Here we present the computational approach TIGER (Transduction Inference in GERmline genomes), enabling the discovery of non-reference L1-mediated transductions by combining L1 discovery with detection of unique insertion sequences and detailed characterization of insertion sites. We employed TIGER to characterize polymorphic transductions in fifteen genomes from non-human primate species (chimpanzee, orangutan and rhesus macaque), as well as in a human genome. We achieved high accuracy as confirmed by PCR and two single molecule DNA sequencing techniques, and uncovered differences in relative rates of transduction between primate species.

CONCLUSIONS: By enabling detection of polymorphic transductions, TIGER makes this form of relevant structural variation amenable for population and personal genome analysis.

Last updated on 09/03/2024
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