Abstract
Motivation The traditional view of cancer evolution states that a cancer genome accumulates a sequential ordering of mutations over a long period of time. However, in recent years it has been suggested that a cancer genome may instead undergo a one-Time catastrophic event, such as chromothripsis, where a large number of mutations instead occur simultaneously. A number of potential signatures of chromothripsis have been proposed. In this work, we provide a rigorous formulation and analysis of the â ability to walk the derivative chromosome' signature originally proposed by Korbel and Campbell. In particular, we show that this signature, as originally envisioned, may not always be present in a chromothripsis genome and we provide a precise quantification of under what circumstances it would be present. We also propose a variation on this signature, the H/T alternating fraction, which allows us to overcome some of the limitations of the original signature. Results We apply our measure to both simulated data and a previously analyzed real cancer dataset and find that the H/T alternating fraction may provide useful signal for distinguishing genomes having acquired mutations simultaneously from those acquired in a sequential fashion.
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CITATION STYLE
Oesper, L., Dantas, S., & Raphael, B. J. (2018). Identifying simultaneous rearrangements in cancer genomes. Bioinformatics, 34(2), 346–352. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btx745
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