Ultra-rapid somatic variant detection via real-time targeted amplicon sequencing

Jack Wadden(University of Michigan), Brandon Newell(University of Michigan), Joshua Bugbee(University of Michigan), Vishal John(University of Michigan), Amy K. Bruzek(University of Michigan), Robert P. Dickson(University of Michigan), Carl Koschmann(University of Michigan), David Blaauw(University of Michigan), Satish Narayanasamy(University of Michigan), Reetuparna Das(University of Michigan)
Communications Biology
July 15, 2022
Cited by 9Open Access
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Abstract

Molecular markers are essential for cancer diagnosis, clinical trial enrollment, and some surgical decision making, motivating ultra-rapid, intraoperative variant detection. Sequencing-based detection is considered the gold standard approach, but typically takes hours to perform due to time-consuming DNA extraction, targeted amplification, and library preparation times. In this work, we present a proof-of-principle approach for sub-1 hour targeted variant detection using real-time DNA sequencers. By modifying existing protocols, optimizing for diagnostic time-to-result, we demonstrate confirmation of a hot-spot mutation from tumor tissue in ~52 minutes. To further reduce time, we explore rapid, targeted Loop-mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP) and design a bioinformatics tool-LAMPrey-to process sequenced LAMP product. LAMPrey's concatemer aware alignment algorithm is designed to maximize recovery of diagnostically relevant information leading to a more rapid detection versus standard read alignment approaches. Using LAMPrey, we demonstrate confirmation of a hot-spot mutation (250x support) from tumor tissue in less than 30 minutes.


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