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- Daniel C Link, Laura G Schuettpelz, Dong Shen, Jinling Wang, Matthew J Walter, Shashikant Kulkarni, Jacqueline E Payton, Jennifer Ivanovich, Paul J Goodfellow, Michelle Le Beau, Daniel C Koboldt, David J Dooling, Robert S Fulton, R Hugh F Bender, Lucinda L Fulton, Kimberly D Delehaunty, Catrina C Fronick, Elizabeth L Appelbaum, Heather Schmidt, Rachel Abbott, Michelle O'Laughlin, Ken Chen, Michael D McLellan, Nobish Varghese, Rakesh Nagarajan, Sharon Heath, Timothy A Graubert, Li Ding, Timothy J Ley, Gerard P Zambetti, Richard K Wilson, and Elaine R Mardis.
- Department of Medicine, Siteman Cancer Center, Washington University, St Louis, Missouri, USA.
- JAMA. 2011 Apr 20; 305 (15): 1568-76.
ContextThe identification of patients with inherited cancer susceptibility syndromes facilitates early diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. However, in many cases of suspected cancer susceptibility, the family history is unclear and genetic testing of common cancer susceptibility genes is unrevealing.ObjectiveTo apply whole-genome sequencing to a patient without any significant family history of cancer but with suspected increased cancer susceptibility because of multiple primary tumors to identify rare or novel germline variants in cancer susceptibility genes. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANT: Skin (normal) and bone marrow (leukemia) DNA were obtained from a patient with early-onset breast and ovarian cancer (negative for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations) and therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML) and analyzed with the following: whole-genome sequencing using paired-end reads, single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping, RNA expression profiling, and spectral karyotyping.Main Outcome MeasuresStructural variants, copy number alterations, single-nucleotide variants, and small insertions and deletions (indels) were detected and validated using the described platforms. RESULTS; Whole-genome sequencing revealed a novel, heterozygous 3-kilobase deletion removing exons 7-9 of TP53 in the patient's normal skin DNA, which was homozygous in the leukemia DNA as a result of uniparental disomy. In addition, a total of 28 validated somatic single-nucleotide variations or indels in coding genes, 8 somatic structural variants, and 12 somatic copy number alterations were detected in the patient's leukemia genome.ConclusionWhole-genome sequencing can identify novel, cryptic variants in cancer susceptibility genes in addition to providing unbiased information on the spectrum of mutations in a cancer genome.
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