SDSC resources, expertise used in genomic analysis of 115 year-old woman

Posted: April 30, 2014 at 9:45 am

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

29-Apr-2014

Contact: Jan Zverina jzverina@sdsc.edu 858-534-5111 University of California - San Diego

A team of researchers investigating the genome of a healthy supercentenarian since 2011 has found many somatic mutations permanent changes in cells other than reproductive ones that arose during the woman's lifetime. Led by Erik Sistermans and Henne Holstege from the VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam, the team recently published its findings in the journal Genome Research as reported by GenomeWeb.

While previous studies have examined mutations that arise in certain disease conditions such as leukemia, Sistermans said that it was not well known how many mutations might appear in the genomes of healthy cells, according to the GenomeWeb report.

At the time of her death at the age of 115, the subject woman, called W115 by the researchers, was the second oldest person in the world and showed no signs of vascular disease or dementia. By donating her body to science, she allowed researchers to study her organs and genome.

The researchers hypothesized that white blood cells, which divide frequently, would have many more somatic mutations than brain cells, which seldom divide. Thus the whole genomes of W115's blood and brain cells were sequenced using SOLiD technology from Life Technologies. Analyses were then done to look for mutations present in the blood cells but not the brain cells.

These analyses involved numerous computations, some of which were done by Wayne Pfeiffer on the Triton cluster at the San Diego Supercomputer Center at the University of California, San Diego under a National Institutes of Health grant. Pfeiffer said that the initial analyses identified thousands of putative somatic mutations, many of which were incorrect because of sequencing errors. Filters were subsequently developed to select the mutations most likely to be somatic.

Two types of mutations were considered: single nucleotide variants (SNVs) and short insertions or deletions (indels). Filtering of the latter was particularly compute-intensive and was done at SDSC. Thousands of core hours were consumed, and some steps required more than 64 gigabytes of shared memory, according to Pfeiffer.

After filtering, many of the highly likely and moderately likely somatic mutations were tested by targeted sequencing using newer Ion PGM sequencers, also from Life Technologies.

Read more from the original source:
SDSC resources, expertise used in genomic analysis of 115 year-old woman

Related Posts