Quantification of somatic mutation flow across individual cell division events by lineage sequencing

Yehuda Brody, Robert J. Kimmerling, Yosef E. Maruvka, David Benjamin, Joshua J. Elacqua, Nicholas J. Haradhvala, Jaegil Kim, Kent W. Mouw, Kristjana Frangaj, Amnon Koren, Gad Getz, Scott R. Manalis, Paul C. Blainey

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mutation data reveal the dynamic equilibrium between DNA damage and repair processes in cells and are indispensable to the understanding of age-related diseases, tumor evolution, and the acquisition of drug resistance. However, available genome-wide methods have a limited ability to resolve rare somatic variants and the relationships between these variants. Here, we present lineage sequencing, a new genome sequencing approach that enables somatic event reconstruction by providing quality somatic mutation call sets with resolution as high as the single-cell level in subject lineages. Lineage sequencing entails sampling single cells from a population and sequencing subclonal sample sets derived from these cells such that knowledge of relationships among the cells can be used to jointly call variants across the sample set. This approach integrates data from multiple sequence libraries to support each variant and precisely assigns mutations to lineage segments. We applied lineage sequencing to a human colon cancer cell line with a DNA polymerase epsilon (POLE) proofreading deficiency (HT115) and a human retinal epithelial cell line immortalized by constitutive telomerase expression (RPE1). Cells were cultured under continuous observation to link observed single-cell phenotypes with single-cell mutation data. The high sensitivity, specificity, and resolution of the data provide a unique opportunity for quantitative analysis of variation in mutation rate, spectrum, and correlations among variants. Our data show that mutations arrive with nonuniform probability across sublineages and that DNA lesion dynamics may cause strong correlations between certain mutations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1894-1900
Number of pages7
JournalGenome Research
Volume28
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2018
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Brody et al.

Funding

This research was supported by grants from the Institute for Basic Science (IBS-R021-D1) to J.-S.K. and ToolGen, Inc. (0409– 20160107) to D.K.

FundersFunder number
ToolGen, Inc.0409– 20160107
National Heart, Lung, and Blood InstituteDP2HL141005
Institute for Basic ScienceIBS-R021-D1

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