The discrepancy among single nucleotide variants detected by DNA and RNA high throughput sequencing data

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Abstract

Background: High throughput sequencing technology enables the both the human genome and transcriptome to be screened at the single nucleotide resolution. Tools have been developed to infer single nucleotide variants (SNVs) from both DNA and RNA sequencing data. To evaluate how much difference can be expected between DNA and RNA sequencing data, and among tissue sources, we designed a study to examine the single nucleotide difference among five sources of high throughput sequencing data generated from the same individual, including exome sequencing from blood, tumor and adjacent normal tissue, and RNAseq from tumor and adjacent normal tissue. Results: Through careful quality control and analysis of the SNVs, we found little difference between DNA-DNA pairs (1%-2%). However, between DNA-RNA pairs, SNV differences ranged anywhere from 10% to 20%. Conclusions: Only a small portion of these differences can be explained by RNA editing. Instead, the majority of the DNA-RNA differences should be attributed to technical errors from sequencing and post-processing of RNAseq data. Our analysis results suggest that SNV detection using RNAseq is subject to high false positive rates.

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Guo, Y., Zhao, S., Sheng, Q., Samuels, D. C., & Shyr, Y. (2017). The discrepancy among single nucleotide variants detected by DNA and RNA high throughput sequencing data. BMC Genomics, 18. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-017-4022-x

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