4.7 Article

Inconsistency and features of single nucleotide variants detected in whole exome sequencing versus transcriptome sequencing: A case study in lung cancer

Journal

METHODS
Volume 83, Issue -, Pages 118-127

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymeth.2015.04.016

Keywords

Single nucleotide variants; Whole exome sequencing; RNA-Seq; Somatic mutations; Allele frequency; RNA editing

Funding

  1. LUNGevity Foundation
  2. Upstage Lung Cancer
  3. US National Institutes of Health [R01LM011177, P50CA095103, P50CA098131, P30CA068 485]
  4. Vanderbilt Breast SPORE pilot grant
  5. Ingram Professorship Funds
  6. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [T32GM080178]

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Whole exome sequencing (WES) and RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) are two main platforms used for next-generation sequencing (NGS). While WES is primarily for DNA variant discovery and RNA-Seq is mainly for measurement of gene expression, both can be used for detection of genetic variants, especially single nucleotide variants (SNVs). How consistently variants can be detected from WES and RNA-Seq has not been systematically evaluated. In this study, we examined the technical and biological inconsistencies in SNV detection using WES and RNA-Seq data from 27 pairs of tumor and matched normal samples. We analyzed SNVs in three categories: WES unique - those only detected in WES, RNA-Seq unique those only detected in RNA-Seq, and shared - those detected in both. We found a small overlap (average similar to 14%) between the SNVs called in WES and RNA-Seq. The WES unique SNVs were mainly due to low coverage, low expression, or their location on the non-transcribed strand in RNA-Seq data, while the RNA-Seq unique SNVs were primarily due to their location out of the WES-capture boundary regions (accounting similar to 71%), as well as low coverage of the regions, low coverage of the mutant alleles or RNA-editing. The shared SNVs had high locus-specific coverage in both WES and RNA-Seq and high gene expression levels. Additionally, WES unique and RNA-Seq unique SNVs showed different nucleotide substitution patterns, e.g., similar to 55% of RNA-Seq unique variants were A:T -> G:C, a hallmark of RNA editing. This study provides an important evaluation on the inconsistencies of somatic SNVs called in WES and RNA-Seq data. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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