hsegHMM: Hidden Markov model-based allele-specific copy number alteration analysis accounting for hypersegmentation

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Abstract

Background: Somatic copy number alternation (SCNA) is a common feature of the cancer genome and is associated with cancer etiology and prognosis. The allele-specific SCNA analysis of a tumor sample aims to identify the allele-specific copy numbers of both alleles, adjusting for the ploidy and the tumor purity. Next generation sequencing platforms produce abundant read counts at the base-pair resolution across the exome or whole genome which is susceptible to hypersegmentation, a phenomenon where numerous regions with very short length are falsely identified as SCNA. Results: We propose hsegHMM, a hidden Markov model approach that accounts for hypersegmentation for allele-specific SCNA analysis. hsegHMM provides statistical inference of copy number profiles by using an efficient E-M algorithm procedure. Through simulation and application studies, we found that hsegHMM handles hypersegmentation effectively with a t-distribution as a part of the emission probability distribution structure and a carefully defined state space. We also compared hsegHMM with FACETS which is a current method for allele-specific SCNA analysis. For the application, we use a renal cell carcinoma sample from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) study. Conclusions: We demonstrate the robustness of hsegHMM to hypersegmentation. Furthermore, hsegHMM provides the quantification of uncertainty in identifying allele-specific SCNAs over the entire chromosomes. hsegHMM performs better than FACETS when read depth (coverage) is uneven across the genome.

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Choo-Wosoba, H., Albert, P. S., & Zhu, B. (2018). hsegHMM: Hidden Markov model-based allele-specific copy number alteration analysis accounting for hypersegmentation. BMC Bioinformatics, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-018-2412-y

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