Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics

Abstract Background We have evaluated an NGS-based method to detect recurrent gene fusions of diagnostic and prognostic importance in hematological malignancies. Our goal was to achieve a highly specific assay with a simple workflow, short turnaround time and low cost. Method The assay uses a commer...

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Main Authors: Marie Engvall, Nicola Cahill, Britt-Inger Jonsson, Martin Höglund, Helene Hallböök, Lucia Cavelier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Medical Genomics
Subjects:
NGS
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12920-020-00739-4
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spelling doaj-5e85005c5d9c4e89b00736435ddcd6382021-04-02T05:42:20ZengBMCBMC Medical Genomics1755-87942020-07-0113111210.1186/s12920-020-00739-4Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnosticsMarie Engvall0Nicola Cahill1Britt-Inger Jonsson2Martin Höglund3Helene Hallböök4Lucia Cavelier5Department of Immunology, Genetics, and Pathology, Uppsala UniversityDepartment of Immunology, Genetics, and Pathology, Uppsala UniversityClinical genetics, Uppsala University HospitalDepartment of Medical Sciences, Uppsala UniversityDepartment of Medical Sciences, Uppsala UniversityDepartment of Immunology, Genetics, and Pathology, Uppsala UniversityAbstract Background We have evaluated an NGS-based method to detect recurrent gene fusions of diagnostic and prognostic importance in hematological malignancies. Our goal was to achieve a highly specific assay with a simple workflow, short turnaround time and low cost. Method The assay uses a commercially available anchored multiplex PCR panel for target enrichment and library preparation, followed by sequencing using a MiSeq instrument. The panel includes all recurrent gene fusions in AML and ALL and is designed to detect gene-specific fusions without prior knowledge of the partner sequence or specific break points. Diagnostic RNA samples from 27 cases with hematological malignancies encompassing 23 different transcript variants were analyzed. In addition, 12 cases from a validation cohort were assessed. Result All known fusion transcripts were identified with a high degree of confidence, with a large number of reads covering the breakpoints. Importantly, we could identify gene fusions where conventional methods had failed due to cryptic rearrangements or rare fusion partners. The newly-identified fusion partners were verified by RT-PCR and transcript-specific qPCR was designed for patient-specific follow-up. In addition, 12 cases were correctly assessed in a blind test, without prior knowledge of molecular cytogenetics or diagnosis. Conclusion In summary, our results demonstrate that targeted RNA sequencing using anchored multiplex PCR can be implemented in a clinical laboratory for the detection of recurrent and rare gene fusions in hematological diagnostic samples.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12920-020-00739-4LeukemiaGene fusionNGSTargeted RNA sequencingKMT2A
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie Engvall
Nicola Cahill
Britt-Inger Jonsson
Martin Höglund
Helene Hallböök
Lucia Cavelier
spellingShingle Marie Engvall
Nicola Cahill
Britt-Inger Jonsson
Martin Höglund
Helene Hallböök
Lucia Cavelier
Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics
BMC Medical Genomics
Leukemia
Gene fusion
NGS
Targeted RNA sequencing
KMT2A
author_facet Marie Engvall
Nicola Cahill
Britt-Inger Jonsson
Martin Höglund
Helene Hallböök
Lucia Cavelier
author_sort Marie Engvall
title Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics
title_short Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics
title_full Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics
title_fullStr Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics
title_full_unstemmed Detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted RNA-sequencing in routine diagnostics
title_sort detection of leukemia gene fusions by targeted rna-sequencing in routine diagnostics
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Genomics
issn 1755-8794
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background We have evaluated an NGS-based method to detect recurrent gene fusions of diagnostic and prognostic importance in hematological malignancies. Our goal was to achieve a highly specific assay with a simple workflow, short turnaround time and low cost. Method The assay uses a commercially available anchored multiplex PCR panel for target enrichment and library preparation, followed by sequencing using a MiSeq instrument. The panel includes all recurrent gene fusions in AML and ALL and is designed to detect gene-specific fusions without prior knowledge of the partner sequence or specific break points. Diagnostic RNA samples from 27 cases with hematological malignancies encompassing 23 different transcript variants were analyzed. In addition, 12 cases from a validation cohort were assessed. Result All known fusion transcripts were identified with a high degree of confidence, with a large number of reads covering the breakpoints. Importantly, we could identify gene fusions where conventional methods had failed due to cryptic rearrangements or rare fusion partners. The newly-identified fusion partners were verified by RT-PCR and transcript-specific qPCR was designed for patient-specific follow-up. In addition, 12 cases were correctly assessed in a blind test, without prior knowledge of molecular cytogenetics or diagnosis. Conclusion In summary, our results demonstrate that targeted RNA sequencing using anchored multiplex PCR can be implemented in a clinical laboratory for the detection of recurrent and rare gene fusions in hematological diagnostic samples.
topic Leukemia
Gene fusion
NGS
Targeted RNA sequencing
KMT2A
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12920-020-00739-4
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