BMC Bioinformatics (May 2019)

TelomereHunter – in silico estimation of telomere content and composition from cancer genomes

  • Lars Feuerbach,
  • Lina Sieverling,
  • Katharina I. Deeg,
  • Philip Ginsbach,
  • Barbara Hutter,
  • Ivo Buchhalter,
  • Paul A. Northcott,
  • Sadaf S. Mughal,
  • Priya Chudasama,
  • Hanno Glimm,
  • Claudia Scholl,
  • Peter Lichter,
  • Stefan Fröhling,
  • Stefan M. Pfister,
  • David T. W. Jones,
  • Karsten Rippe,
  • Benedikt Brors

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-019-2851-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Establishment of telomere maintenance mechanisms is a universal step in tumor development to achieve replicative immortality. These processes leave molecular footprints in cancer genomes in the form of altered telomere content and aberrations in telomere composition. To retrieve these telomere characteristics from high-throughput sequencing data the available computational approaches need to be extended and optimized to fully exploit the information provided by large scale cancer genome data sets. Results We here present TelomereHunter, a software for the detailed characterization of telomere maintenance mechanism footprints in the genome. The tool is implemented for the analysis of large cancer genome cohorts and provides a variety of diagnostic diagrams as well as machine-readable output for subsequent analysis. A novel key feature is the extraction of singleton telomere variant repeats, which improves the identification and subclassification of the alternative lengthening of telomeres phenotype. We find that whole genome sequencing-derived telomere content estimates strongly correlate with telomere qPCR measurements (r = 0.94). For the first time, we determine the correlation of in silico telomere content quantification from whole genome sequencing and whole genome bisulfite sequencing data derived from the same tumor sample (r = 0.78). An analogous comparison of whole exome sequencing data and whole genome sequencing data measured slightly lower correlation (r = 0.79). However, this is considerably improved by normalization with matched controls (r = 0.91). Conclusions TelomereHunter provides new functionality for the analysis of the footprints of telomere maintenance mechanisms in cancer genomes. Besides whole genome sequencing, whole exome sequencing and whole genome bisulfite sequencing are suited for in silico telomere content quantification, especially if matched control samples are available. The software runs under a GPL license and is available at https://www.dkfz.de/en/applied-bioinformatics/telomerehunter/telomerehunter.html.