Low-frequency somatic copy number alterations in normal human lymphocytes revealed by large-scale single-cell whole-genome profiling

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Abstract

Genomic-scale somatic copy number alterations in healthy humans are difficult to investigate because of low occurrence rates and the structural variations’ stochastic natures. Using a Tn5-transposase-assisted single-cell whole-genome sequencing method, we sequenced over 20,000 single lymphocytes from 16 individuals. Then, with the scale increased to a few thousand single cells per individual, we found that about 7.5% of the cells had large-size copy number alterations. Trisomy 21 was the most prevalent aneuploid event among all autosomal copy number alterations, whereas monosomy X occurred most frequently in over-30-yr-old females. In the monosomy X single cells from individuals with phased genomes and identified X-inactivation ratios in bulk, the inactive X Chromosomes were lost more often than the active ones.

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Liu, L., Chen, H., Sun, C., Zhang, J., Wang, J., Du, M., … Huang, Y. (2022). Low-frequency somatic copy number alterations in normal human lymphocytes revealed by large-scale single-cell whole-genome profiling. Genome Research, 32(1), 44–54. https://doi.org/10.1101/GR.275453.121

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