Arrays Flashcards
Types of array and applications
- Comparative genomic hybridisation: CNV
- Gene expression array
- Chromatin immunoprecipitation on chip
- SNP array (snp genotype and CNV)
- Exon array (detect different forms of splicing)
- Tiling array (overlapping probes densely represent region)
- Fusion gene array (cancer fusion transcripts)
What is aCGH?
Competitive genomic hybridisation (aCGH) is used to detect copy number changes across the whole genome.
Differential fluorescent labelling of patient and reference DNA and competitive hybridisation (1:1 ratio) to thousands of oligonucleotides immobilised on a slide
A microarray scanner measures the signal intensity of red and green fluorescence for each oligonucleotide probe
Signal intensity is compared after normalisation
Software is used to calculate the logarithm of the ratio of signal (Log2), which are plotted by each chromosome
Circular binary segmentation is then used to detect imbalances
Clinical applications of arrays
Constitutional cytogenetics
Prenatal diagnosis
Solid tumours
Products of conception
Malignancies
Common cause of recurrent CNVs
Presence of segmental duplications
Non-allelic homologous recombination between low copy repeat sequences flanking the region
Resolution of karyotyping
> 5Mb
Advantages of aCGH
Rapid and accurate detection of CNV over whole genome
High resolution (min 180Kb in Manc)
Enables deletion/duplication breakpoint mapping and sequencing if necessary
Enabled the discovery of many new syndromes not detectable by karyotyping
Identifies gene content of pathogenic imbalances
Can detect unbalanced products of balanced parental rearragements
Limitations of aCGH
Cannot detect balanced rearrangements (reciprocal translocations, inversions)
Does not provide positional information e.g. duplication tandem or insertion? (need FISH)
Two changes on one chromosome (are they on same homologue? implications for recurrence risk)
Detects numerous VUS (interpretation complex)
Cannot detect the order or orientation of rearranged segment (FISH studies required)
May not detect low levels of mosaicism (abnormal cells
What is a CNV?
A segment of DNA that differs in copy number in comparison to the reference genome
12% human genome is CNV
Contribute to 7% of genome variability within humans
Considerations for clinical interpretation of CNVs
- Comparison with internal and external databases (known normal variation or known pathogenic/ frequency in normal pop)
- Association with known syndromes (Unique)
- Genomic content (genes associated with phenotype? Dosage sensitivity? Does this fit?)
- CNV size (large CNVs may be benign and small pathogenic!)
- Follow up studies (inherited from phenotypically normal parent?/de novo? cases of non-penetrance)
Follow up studies for abnormal CNV
Confirmation not required
Parental bloods are not routinely investigated if UV identified in proband
If pathogenic CNV detected, parental bloods studied to assess recurrence risk and establish inheritance
Use of FISH is preferable (positional information, may detect balanced rearrangement)
Postnatal referral acceptance criteria
Patients showing:
- Developmental delay
- Learning difficulties
- Behavioural disorders
- Dysmorphism
- Multiple congenital abnormalities
Parental bloods after detection of abnormality in proband
Prenatal referral acceptance criteria
At least one structural abnormality on scan
Nuchal measurement equal to or greater than 3.5mm in first trimester (or 6 in the second)
IUGR without placental insifficiency
Fetuses with a sex chromosome aneuploidy that is unlikely to explain the ultrasound abnormality
(in Manc arrays are performed if initial QF-PCR is normal and not performed for increased risk of Down’s)
Classifying variants as benign (class 1)
Evidence in curated databases of normal variants at a level of >1% in control populations in a least 1 publication (be critical of pop no.) with same gene content, ideally 100% coverage
Comparison with internal database. >3% preferable with 100% coverage. Manchester at least 10 patients with same CNV.
Decipher consensus frequency >1%
Likely benign (class 2)
No gene within region of CNV
Evidence at low levels in curated databases of normal variants in control populations
Intronic where no evidence of pathogenicity of same change in lit/databases
min/max co-ordinates more than 20bp from intron/exon boundary
VUS (class 3)
Contains genes where there is no published evidence on dosage sensitivity
No clear evidence in literature to support/refute pathogenicity or conflicting evidence
CNV includes gene associated with recessive disorder