Open adjacencies and k-breaks: Detecting simultaneous rearrangements in cancer genomes

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Abstract

Background: The evolution of a cancer genome has traditionally been described as a sequential accumulation of mutations - including chromosomal rearrangements - over a period of time. Recent research suggests, however, that numerous rearrangements may be acquired simultaneously during a single cataclysmic event, leading to the proposal of new mechanisms of rearrangement such as chromothripsis and chromoplexy. Results: We introduce two measures, open adjacency rate (OAR) and copy-number asymmetry enrichment (CAE), that assess the prevalence of simultaneously formed breakpoints, or k-breaks with k >2, compared to the sequential accumulation of standard rearrangements, or 2-breaks. We apply the OAR and the CAE to genome sequencing data from 121 cancer genomes from two different studies. Conclusions: We find that the OAR and CAE correlate well with previous analyses of chromothripsis/chromoplexy but make differing predictions on a small subset of genomes. These results lend support to the existence of simultaneous rearrangements, but also demonstrate the difficulty of characterizing such rearrangements using different criterion.

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Weinreb, C., Oesper, L., & Raphael, B. J. (2014). Open adjacencies and k-breaks: Detecting simultaneous rearrangements in cancer genomes. BMC Genomics, 15(6). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-15-S6-S4

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