Cold Spring Harbor molecular case studies, volume 8, issue 1, pages a006157

Hi-C detects genomic structural variants in peripheral blood of pediatric leukemia patients

Claire Mallard 1
Michael T. Johnston 1
Anna Bobyn 1
Ana Nikolic 1
Bob Argiropoulos 1
Gregory M.T. Guilcher 1
Marco Gallo 1
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-11-24
scimago Q2
SJR0.801
CiteScore3.2
Impact factor1.8
ISSN23732873, 23732865
General Medicine
Abstract

B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is often driven by chromosome translocations that result in recurrent and well-studied gene fusions. Currently, fluorescent in situ hybridization probes are used to detect candidate translocations in bone marrow samples from B-ALL patients. Recently Hi-C, a sequencing-based technique originally designed to reconstruct the three-dimensional architecture of the nuclear genome, was shown to effectively recognize structural variants. Here, we demonstrate that Hi-C can be used as a genome-wide assay to detect translocations and other structural variants of potential clinical interest. Structural variants were identified in both bone marrow and peripheral blood samples, including an ETV6–RUNX1 translocation present in one pediatric B-ALL patient. Our report provides proof of principle that Hi-C could be an effective strategy to globally detect driver structural variants in B-ALL peripheral blood specimens, reducing the need for invasive bone marrow biopsies and candidate-based clinical tests.

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