Method

TITAN: Inference of copy number architectures in clonal cell populations from tumor whole genome sequence data

    • 1 BC Cancer Agency;
    • 2 Centre for Translational and Applied Genomics;
    • 3 Genome Sciences Centre;
    • 4 Vancouver General Hospital;
    • 5 University of British Columbia
Published July 24, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.180281.114
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cover of Genome Research Vol 36 Issue 6
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Abstract

The evolution of cancer genomes within a single tumor creates mixed cell populations with divergent somatic mutational landscapes. Inference of tumor subpopulations has been disproportionately focused on the assessment of somatic point mutations, whereas computational methods targeting evolutionary dynamics of copy number alterations (CNA) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in whole genome sequencing data remain under-developed. We present a novel probabilistic model, TITAN, to infer CNA and LOH events while accounting for mixtures of cell populations, thereby estimating the proportion of cells harboring each event. We evaluate TITAN on idealized mixtures, simulating clonal populations from whole genome sequences taken from genomically heterogeneous ovarian tumor sites collected from the same patient. In addition, we show in 23 whole genomes of breast tumors that inference of CNA and LOH using TITAN critically inform population structure and the nature of the evolving cancer genome. Finally, we experimentally validated subclonal predictions using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and single-cell sequencing from an ovarian cancer patient sample, thereby recapitulating the key modeling assumptions of TITAN.

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