Abstract

Recent advances in oligonucleotide arrays and whole-genome complexity reduction data analysis now permit the evaluation of tens of thousands of single-nucleotide polymorphisms simultaneously for a genome-wide analysis of allelic status. Using these arrays, we created high-resolution allelotype maps of 26 pancreatic cancer cell lines. The areas of heterozygosity implicitly served to reveal regions of allelic loss. The array-derived maps were verified by a panel of 317 microsatellite markers used in a subset of seven samples, showing a 97.1% concordance between heterozygous calls. Three matched tumor/normal pairs were used to estimate the false-negative and potential false-positive rates for identifying loss of heterozygosity: 3.6 regions (average minimal region of loss, 720,228 bp) and 2.3 regions (average heterozygous gap distance, 4,434,994 bp) per genome, respectively. Genomic fractional allelic loss calculations showed that cumulative levels of allelic loss ranged widely from 17.1% to 79.9% of the haploid genome length. Regional increases in "NoCall" frequencies combined with copy number loss estimates were used to identify 41 homozygous deletions (19 first reports), implicating an additional 13 regions disrupted in pancreatic cancer. Unexpectedly, 23 of these occurred in just two lines (BxPc3 and MiaPaCa2), suggesting the existence of at least two subclasses of chromosomal instability (CIN) patterns, distinguished here by allelic loss and copy number changes (original CIN) and those also highly enriched in the genomic "holes" of homozygous deletions (holey CIN). This study provides previously unavailable high-resolution allelotype and deletion breakpoint maps in widely shared pancreatic cancer cell lines and effectively eliminates the need for matched normal tissue to define informative loci.

Highlights

  • A greater efficiency in analyzing loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in cancer genomes is needed

  • Several studies have reported the usefulness of the Affymetrix 10K arrays in determining allelic loss when using matched normal tissues [26, 27]

  • We evaluated an initial panel of seven pancreatic cancer cell lines (AsPc1, BxPc3, COLO357, Hs766T, MiaPaCa2, Panc-1, and Su86.86) using the Affymetrix CentXba and CentHind oligonucleotide arrays

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Summary

Introduction

A greater efficiency in analyzing loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in cancer genomes is needed. We felt several possible explanations existed for these discrepancies, www.aacrjournals.org including one or more of the following: the ambiguity (i.e., precision; see below) of assigning the critical gap breakpoints as well as the choice of method to combine adjacent critical gaps into contiguous regions (affects seven regions); the presence of a mosaic population of cells in culture with different genomic constitutions (inspection of SNP densities in five regions were visibly decreased from normal but not consistent with complete loss); large regions of possible identity-by-descent that could lead to an incorrect classification as a critical gap (the size of seven critical gaps were

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