Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Concern on tumor samples with mixed cell population

    I'm working on cancer exome and transcriptome sequencing project. Sequencing data on tumor samples are derived from a mixed population of cells. Is there any good way to handle this issue?

  • #2
    MuTect (and many others) published to deal with this

    Comment


    • #3
      For SNV calling, I would also highly recommend VarScan2 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22300766). Others include SomaticSniper (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22155872) and Strelka (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22581179). In all cases, a matched reference tissue is required.
      It is also important to be aware of/accomodate varying sources of contamination. For example, contamination levels (normal sample in the tumour sample and vice-versa) vary significantly between liquid and solid tumours, and the sampling schema. Unfortunately though there is no magic bullet, yet.

      Comment


      • #4
        Magic bullet might be single cell sequencing. The results of edge tumor vs. core samples would be interesting as would, of course, differences between adjacent malignant cells. After talking with leukemia researchers, I'm under the impression that they do , somehow, sort the cells into "evil" vs. (presumably) "not so evil" and harvest the evil ones.

        Comment


        • #5
          Yes, with leukemias that might actually be feasible. For solid tumors, really challenging -- the "good" and "evil" are so intertwined it is hard to pick them apart. Probably will need single-cell sequencing that is cheap enough that you can just sequence many & then decide downstream which are "good" and "evil".

          If you look closely at the original Mardis lab publication on leukemia WGS (if not first, one of the early ones), they actually encountered the converse problem -- because the patient had a very severe blast crisis, the normal samples were significantly contaminated with leukemic cells!

          Comment

          Latest Articles

          Collapse

          • seqadmin
            Essential Discoveries and Tools in Epitranscriptomics
            by seqadmin




            The field of epigenetics has traditionally concentrated more on DNA and how changes like methylation and phosphorylation of histones impact gene expression and regulation. However, our increased understanding of RNA modifications and their importance in cellular processes has led to a rise in epitranscriptomics research. “Epitranscriptomics brings together the concepts of epigenetics and gene expression,” explained Adrien Leger, PhD, Principal Research Scientist...
            04-22-2024, 07:01 AM
          • seqadmin
            Current Approaches to Protein Sequencing
            by seqadmin


            Proteins are often described as the workhorses of the cell, and identifying their sequences is key to understanding their role in biological processes and disease. Currently, the most common technique used to determine protein sequences is mass spectrometry. While still a valuable tool, mass spectrometry faces several limitations and requires a highly experienced scientist familiar with the equipment to operate it. Additionally, other proteomic methods, like affinity assays, are constrained...
            04-04-2024, 04:25 PM

          ad_right_rmr

          Collapse

          News

          Collapse

          Topics Statistics Last Post
          Started by seqadmin, Yesterday, 08:47 AM
          0 responses
          15 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Started by seqadmin, 04-11-2024, 12:08 PM
          0 responses
          60 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Started by seqadmin, 04-10-2024, 10:19 PM
          0 responses
          60 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Started by seqadmin, 04-10-2024, 09:21 AM
          0 responses
          54 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Working...
          X