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  1. ...rearrangements resulting in complex patterns of genomic architecture and copy number changes (Bignell et al. 2007, 2010; Pleasance et al. 2010a,b). Unlocking the temporal dynamics of these complex genomic structures may provide important insights into the mechanisms of cancer development. Although recent methods...
  2. ...of somatic genomic rearrangement in human cancer amplicons at sequence-level resolution . Genome Res. 17 : 1296 – 1303 . ↵ Campbell, P.J. , Stephens, P.J. , Pleasance, E.D. , O'Meara, S. , Li, H. , Santarius, T. , Stebbings, L.A. , Leroy, C. , Edkins, S. , Hardy, C. , et al. ( 2008 ) Identification...
  3. ...distance between breakpoints. Tables shows counts for each group. Complex genomic rearrangements in cancer Genome Research 2255 www..org rangements in tumor amplicons and identified 59 unique breakpoints in HCC1954. Zhao et al. (2009) used long transcriptome reads to nominate fusion transcripts...
  4. ...of various mutational processes (Carvalho and Lupski 2016) that could be specific to cancer types or environmental exposures (Alexandrov et al. 2020). In addition to gradually accumulating somatic mutations, cancer s are often characterized by genomic instability (Drews et al. 2022) and rearranged s (Li et...
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  5. ...contributed equally to this work. Abstract Somatic genome rearrangements are thought to play important roles in cancer development. We optimized a long-span paired-end-tag (PET) sequencing approach using 10-Kb genomic DNA inserts to study human genome structural variations (SVs). The use of a 10-Kb...
  6. ...in human cancer amplicons at sequence-level resolution. Genome Res 17: 1296–1303. Campbell PJ, Stephens PJ, Pleasance ED, O’Meara S, Li H, Santarius T, Stebbings LA, Leroy C, Edkins S, Hardy C, et al. 2008. Identification of somatically acquired rearrangements in cancer using -wide massively parallel...
  7. ...Tumor genomes are generally thought to evolve through a gradual accumulation of mutations, but the observation that extraordinarily complex rearrangements can arise through single mutational events suggests that evolution may be accelerated by punctuated changes in genome architecture. To assess...
  8. ...the best candidate region to mediate NAHR, resulting in the deletion found in CH03-29. There were no somatic cell hybrids available for this patient, thus we used long-range PCR to directly amplify the junction fragment in CH03-29 using total genomic DNA. We designed PCR primers to amplify a rearranged...
  9. ...amplicons at sequence-level resolution. Genome Res 17: 1296–1303. Boca SM, Kinzler KW, Velculescu VE, Vogelstein B, Parmigiani G. 2010. Patient-oriented gene set analysis for cancer mutation data. Genome Biol 11: R112. doi: 10.1186/gb-2010-11-11-r112. Boyko AR, Quignon P, Li L, Schoenebeck JJ, Degenhardt JD...
  10. ...rearrangement in human cancer amplicons at sequence-level resolution. Genome Res 17: 1296–1303. Campbell PJ, Stephens PJ, Pleasance ED, O’Meara S, Li H, Santarius T, Stebbings LA, Leroy C, Edkins S, Hardy C, et al. 2008. Identification of somatically acquired rearrangements in cancer using wide massively...
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