Technologies for sequencing and interpreting personal genomes
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Harvard University
Abstract
This dissertation is focused on the development of technologies to increase our
understanding of the correlation between genomes and phenomes. Particularly, it
describes advances in sequencing technology and targeted capture of genomic regions of
interest to increase the efficiency of collecting genomic information. Additionally, it
discusses improvements in interpreting these genomic regions using existing databases.
The introduction starts by describing the nature of our genetic individuality and our
understanding of it, beginning with the mapping of genes using extensive pedigrees,
followed by the mapping of common diseases to common variants using large
populations, and finally the sequencing of genetic material from large populations to
correlate phenotypes with rare variants. It then provides a brief review of Second
Generation Sequencing (SGS), genomic targeting methods and the clinical applicability
of disease-related variants found in healthy individuals. Chapter 2 describes a web-based
software tool and its performance in annotating all genomic variants identified in 25
genomes using several general mutation databases, together with an algorithm for
identifying those variants with the potential for clinical utility. Additionally, arguments
for clinical geneticists prioritizing various sets of genes are presented and the error rates
of different sequencing platforms are discussed. Chapter 3 describes molecular inversion
probes (MIPs) and their use in targeting exons for sequencing from the first ten
participants from the Personal Genome Project. Additionally, it describes various tools
developed to analyze this data. Chapter 4 describes different biases of MIPs and presents
design criteria for future experiments targeting genomic regions with MIPs. Appendices
A, B and C describe technical improvements to the open source Polonator SGS platform,
including the development of a microfluidics flow-cell (Appendix A), the replacement of
emulsion PCR amplified beads with rolling circle amplified colonies (“rolonies”,
Appendix B) and the use of ordered arrays to increase the density of sequenced features
(Appendix C). Taken together, these technical improvements represent a >400x decrease
in sequencing cost. Appendix D describes the first open-source SGS platform, Appendix
E improvements to MIP targeting, Appendix F the MIPTAG Pro algorithm for designing
MIPs and Appendix G the analysis of a genome sequenced for a consumables cost of less than $4,400 through the use of rolonies and ordered arrays.
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Citation
Rosenbaum, A. M. (2010). Technologies for sequencing and interpreting personal genomes. Retrieved from ProQuest Digital Dissertations. (AAT3415408)