Effect of next-generation exome sequencing depth for discovery of diagnostic variants

Cited 0 time in scopus
Metadata Downloads
Title
Effect of next-generation exome sequencing depth for discovery of diagnostic variants
Author(s)
K Kim; M W Seong; Won-Hyong Chung; S S Park; S Leem; Won Park; J Kim; K Lee; R W Park; Namshin Kim
Bibliographic Citation
Genomics & Informatics, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 31-39
Publication Year
2015
Abstract
Sequencing depth, which is directly related to the cost and time required for the generation, processing, and maintenance of next-generation sequencing data, is an important factor in the practical utilization of such data in clinical fields. Unfortunately, identifying an exome sequencing depth adequate for clinical use is a challenge that has not been addressed extensively. Here, we investigate the effect of exome sequencing depth on the discovery of sequence variants for clinical use. Toward this, we sequenced ten germ-line blood samples from breast cancer patients on the Illumina platform GAII(x) at a high depth of ~200×. We observed that most function-related diverse variants in the human exonic regions could be detected at a sequencing depth of 120×. Furthermore, investigation using a diagnostic gene set showed that the number of clinical variants identified using exome sequencing reached a plateau at an average sequencing depth of about 120×. Moreover, the phenomena were consistent across the breast cancer samples.
Keyword
clinical applicationdiagnostic variantexome sequencinggenetic variationhigh-throughput nucleotidesequence variantsequencing
ISSN
I000-0158
Publisher
Korea Soc-Assoc-Inst
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/GI.2015.13.2.31.
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
1. Journal Articles > Journal Articles
Files in This Item:
  • There are no files associated with this item.


Items in OpenAccess@KRIBB are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.