DNA Copy Number Variation in a Cohort of Healthy Australian Women
Abstract
The investigation and characterisation of genetic variation has
progressed rapidly in the past decade. Concomitant with this is
the advancement in technology facilitating the interrogation of
the genome for different types of genetic variants. The global
aim is to develop a complete map of genetic variation.
Several fundamental studies have provided the impetus for the
investigation of structural variation. However early research was
hindered by study design, differing quality control criteria,
technical limitations and poorly defined “normal” populations
culminating in low levels of reproducibility and inconsistency
between studies. Few studies documented genetic variation in
general population cohorts.
Reported here is a study of 64 Australian women representing a
Western European descendent population using high resolution SNP
microarray. This cohort represents a “healthy” general
population that is clinically documented differentiating it from
other studies. The focus of this thesis is to characterise the
properties, chromosome distribution, gene content and identify
rare and common events of copy number variation (CNV) and long
contiguous stretches of homozygosity (LCSH). The cause and effect
of technical limitations on the detection and reporting of these
variants is considered with respect to the impact for diagnostic
interpretation.
The findings in this thesis demonstrate a non-random chromosome
distribution of CNV and predominance of small deletion (<10Kb)
although the relative contribution of duplication and deletion
equalised in CNV >100kb. Comparison against clinical cohorts
revealed a predominance of duplication, in particular CNV <250kb
in the clinical cohort, a concept not previously reported. The
breakpoint sequence signature of selected benign CNV identified
base pair microhomology and investigation of the intervening
genomic architecture provided the structure indicative of a
replication repair mechanism.
Long contiguous stretches of homozygosity (LCSH) has roles in
genetic diversity and pathogenesis of disease. The contribution
of LCSH to the genome of outbred populations is reported to be
greater than first indicated and population variation is
apparent. This thesis describes the LCSH chromosomal landscape,
identifies population specific events and illustrates the
technical challenges of LCSH detection. The ascertainment of the
background level of LCSH in the local population (0.7% of the
genome) enabled determination of appropriate thresholds for
interpretation in clinical diagnostics.
Documenting CNV and LCSH in a cohort of the general population
contributes to the common goal of defining genetic variation in
the human genome. Comparison against clinical cohorts identifies
similarities and differences which will provide insight for the
direction of further investigation. Furthermore the documentation
of common and rare variants in a general population cohort
provides evidence for the interpretation in clinical
diagnostics.
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