PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Combined Targeted DNA Sequencing in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Using UNCseq and NGScopy, and RNA Sequencing Using UNCqeR for the Detection of Genetic Aberrations in NSCLC.

  • Xiaobei Zhao,
  • Anyou Wang,
  • Vonn Walter,
  • Nirali M Patel,
  • David A Eberhard,
  • Michele C Hayward,
  • Ashley H Salazar,
  • Heejoon Jo,
  • Matthew G Soloway,
  • Matthew D Wilkerson,
  • Joel S Parker,
  • Xiaoying Yin,
  • Guosheng Zhang,
  • Marni B Siegel,
  • Gary B Rosson,
  • H Shelton Earp,
  • Norman E Sharpless,
  • Margaret L Gulley,
  • Karen E Weck,
  • D Neil Hayes,
  • Stergios J Moschos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. e0129280

Abstract

Read online

The recent FDA approval of the MiSeqDx platform provides a unique opportunity to develop targeted next generation sequencing (NGS) panels for human disease, including cancer. We have developed a scalable, targeted panel-based assay termed UNCseq, which involves a NGS panel of over 200 cancer-associated genes and a standardized downstream bioinformatics pipeline for detection of single nucleotide variations (SNV) as well as small insertions and deletions (indel). In addition, we developed a novel algorithm, NGScopy, designed for samples with sparse sequencing coverage to detect large-scale copy number variations (CNV), similar to human SNP Array 6.0 as well as small-scale intragenic CNV. Overall, we applied this assay to 100 snap-frozen lung cancer specimens lacking same-patient germline DNA (07-0120 tissue cohort) and validated our results against Sanger sequencing, SNP Array, and our recently published integrated DNA-seq/RNA-seq assay, UNCqeR, where RNA-seq of same-patient tumor specimens confirmed SNV detected by DNA-seq, if RNA-seq coverage depth was adequate. In addition, we applied the UNCseq assay on an independent lung cancer tumor tissue collection with available same-patient germline DNA (11-1115 tissue cohort) and confirmed mutations using assays performed in a CLIA-certified laboratory. We conclude that UNCseq can identify SNV, indel, and CNV in tumor specimens lacking germline DNA in a cost-efficient fashion.