The Oxford Nanopore (ONT) platform provides portable and rapid genome sequencing, and its ability to natively profile DNA methylation without complex sample processing is attractive for point-of-care real-time sequencing. We recently demonstrated ONT shallow whole-genome sequencing to detect copy number alterations (CNAs) from the circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) of cancer patients. Here, we show that cell type and cancer-specific methylation changes can also be detected, as well as cancer-associated fragmentation signatures. This feasibility study suggests that ONT shallow WGS could be a powerful tool for liquid biopsy. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
CITATION STYLE
Katsman, E., Orlanski, S., Martignano, F., Fox-Fisher, I., Shemer, R., Dor, Y., … Berman, B. P. (2022). Detecting cell-of-origin and cancer-specific methylation features of cell-free DNA from Nanopore sequencing. Genome Biology, 23(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-022-02710-1
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