Genome-Wide Detection of Single-Nucleotide and Copy-Number Variations of a Single Human Cell
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Kindred cells can have different genomes because of dynamic changes in DNA. Single-cell sequencing is needed to characterize these genomic differences but has been hindered by whole-genome amplification bias, resulting in low genome coverage. Here, we report on a new amplification method-multiple annealing and looping-based amplification cycles (MALBAC)-that offers high uniformity across the genome. Sequencing MALBAC-amplified DNA achieves 93% genome coverage ≥1x for a single human cell at 25x mean sequencing depth. We detected digitized copy-number variations (CNVs) of a single cancer cell. By sequencing three kindred cells, we were able to identify individual single-nucleotide variations (SNVs), with no…
Citation impact
1,206
total citations
- FWCI
- 28.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Citations per year
Authors
4Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Genome
- Human genome
- Biology
- Copy-number variation
- Genetics
- Single-nucleotide polymorphism
- DNA sequencing
- Cancer genome sequencing
No related works found for this paper.