Copy Number Variation
Eleanor Feingold
University of Pittsburgh
March 2012
What do we mean by copy number variation?
Copy number variation in a gene or gene region
WhatFind chromosomal segments (usually large ones) that are duplicated and/or deleted in tumor cell lines
WhyLearn something about cancer biologyor
Implications for treatment and prognosis
Cancer geneticsClinical pediatricsWhatDetect inherited or de novo deletions in individuals
WhyDiagnose birth defects
Classical copy number study types
And now: Genetic association studies for CNVs
012+cases65133202controls1681316
How do we assay copy number variation?
What
Microarray of clones (e.g. BACs)
Usually on glass slide
Competitive hybridization of test and reference samples.
Measure fluorescence ratio clone by clone.
Limitations
Large clones.
Sparse coverage.
High noise due to spotting process.
Generation 1 - Array CGH
What
High-throughput SNP genotyping platforms (e.g. Affymetrix, Illumina)
Disadvantages
Technology was never intended for measuring copy number.
SNPs on chip selected to avoid CNV regions by design.
Generation 2 - SNP chipsAdvantage
Hundreds of thousands of points of info.
Advantages
SNPs in known CNV regions are now included.
Also have non-polymorphic SNPs (SNs?)
Generation 3 - SNP chips with CNV markers(Affy 6.0, Illumina 1M)Affymetrix
200K probes in 5K known large CNV regions700K probes evenly spaced along the genome Illumina
1M markers in 10K regions of various types and sizes
Changes
Got rid of the non-polymorphic markers.
Special coverage of CNV regions???
Are these better or worse for CNVs than the previous generation?
Generation 4 -(Illumina 2.5M, 5M)
What data do these technologies give us, and how do we use it?
BBABAAStandard genotyping
Genotype information is in the angle (relative intensity of the two alleles).
Copy number information is in the distance from the origin (total intensity).
AAAAABABBBBBAAABBBABnullIn theory
AAA and AAAABABABBBBB and BBBut when you look at the data trisomic(DownSyndrome)disomic
All SNPs on chromosome 21
AAAAABABBBBBAAABBBABnullIn theory
ABnullIn practice
So how are copy numbers called?Look for runs of SNPs that are high or low in intensity Many available algorithms e.g. HMM, CBS, change-point
Basic picture
Komura et al.
GenomeResearch2006
More complex examples (cancer genetics)Peiffer et al. Genome Research, 2006
AAABBB
Extra copy of whole chromosome
No copy number change, but a region of homozygosity (LOH)
Basic pictureWang et al. Genome Research, 2007
*Chromosome 9
A few statistical issues to think about
(theres still a lot to do)
Many run-calling algorithms are oriented towards clinical applications.
Many CNV detection algorithms are very conservative - aim for zero false positive rate.
Most use normalization methods that assume a large reference population is not available.
Many use models that make assumptions about what kinds of variation are likely (e.g. cancer).
Family data should be modeled together.
CNV calls will be much more accurate if you use the whole family, but the model you use should depend on whether you are expecting de novo mutations or not.
For some diseases youll expect associations with de novo changes. For others you might expect inherited variants.
How do we group CNVs for association testing?
Separate methods for deletions?
Deletions are easier to detect than other changes.
Deletions are likely to have simpler biological effects.
The most important one
The technology is still NOT intended for reliably and comparably measuring total intensity!
Total intensity numbers are very sensitive to DNA source, sample handling, etc., so extreme measures must be taken to ensure that cases and controls are comparable.
*********************This copy-neutral aberration can be due to mitotic crossing-over followed by differential reproduction of the two daughter cells.******
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