8 results on '"Lauren Y. Cheng"'
Search Results
2. Direct capture and sequencing reveal ultra-short single-stranded DNA in biofluids
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Lauren Y. Cheng, Peng Dai, Lucia R. Wu, Abhijit A. Patel, and David Yu Zhang
- Subjects
Biological sciences ,Genomics ,Biotechnology ,Biological sciences research methodologies ,Biology experimental methods ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) has become the predominant analyte of liquid biopsy; however, recent studies suggest the presence of subnucleosomal-sized DNA fragments in circulation that are likely single-stranded. Here, we report a method called direct capture and sequencing (DCS) tailored to recover such fragments from biofluids by directly capturing them using short degenerate probes followed by single strand-based library preparation and next-generation sequencing. DCS revealed a new DNA population in biofluids, named ultrashort single-stranded DNA (ussDNA). Evaluation of the size distribution and abundance of ussDNA manifested generality of its presence in humans, animal species, and plants. In humans, red blood cells were found to contain abundant ussDNA; plasma-derived ussDNA exhibited modal size at 50 nt. This work reports the presence of an understudied DNA population in circulation, and yet more work is awaiting to study its generation mechanism, tissue of origin, disease implications, etc.
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- 2022
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3. Confirming putative variants at ≤ 5% allele frequency using allele enrichment and Sanger sequencing
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Yan Helen Yan, Sherry X. Chen, Lauren Y. Cheng, Alyssa Y. Rodriguez, Rui Tang, Karina Cabrera, and David Yu Zhang
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Whole exome sequencing (WES) is used to identify mutations in a patient’s tumor DNA that are predictive of tumor behavior, including the likelihood of response or resistance to cancer therapy. WES has a mutation limit of detection (LoD) at variant allele frequencies (VAF) of 5%. Putative mutations called at ≤ 5% VAF are frequently due to sequencing errors, therefore reporting these subclonal mutations incurs risk of significant false positives. Here we performed ~ 1000 × WES on fresh-frozen and formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue biopsy samples from a non-small cell lung cancer patient, and identified 226 putative mutations at between 0.5 and 5% VAF. Each variant was then tested using NuProbe NGSure, to confirm the original WES calls. NGSure utilizes Blocker Displacement Amplification to first enrich the allelic fraction of the mutation and then uses Sanger sequencing to determine mutation identity. Results showed that 52% of the 226 (117) putative variants were disconfirmed, among which 2% (5) putative variants were found to be misidentified in WES. In the 66 cancer-related variants, the disconfirmed rate was 82% (54/66). This data demonstrates Blocker Displacement Amplification allelic enrichment coupled with Sanger sequencing can be used to confirm putative mutations ≤ 5% VAF. By implementing this method, next-generation sequencing can reliably report low-level variants at a high sensitivity, without the cost of high sequencing depth.
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- 2021
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4. High sensitivity sanger sequencing detection of BRAF mutations in metastatic melanoma FFPE tissue specimens
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Lauren Y. Cheng, Lauren E. Haydu, Ping Song, Jianyi Nie, Michael T. Tetzlaff, Lawrence N. Kwong, Jeffrey E. Gershenwald, Michael A. Davies, and David Yu Zhang
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Mutations in the BRAF gene at or near the p. V600 locus are informative for therapy selection, but current methods for analyzing FFPE tissue DNA generally have a limit of detection of 5% variant allele frequency (VAF), or are limited to the single variant (V600E). These can result in false negatives for samples with low VAFs due to low tumor content or subclonal heterogeneity, or harbor non-V600 mutations. Here, we show that Sanger sequencing using the NuProbe VarTrace BRAF assay, based on the Blocker Displacement Amplification (BDA) technology, is capable of detecting BRAF V600 mutations down to 0.20% VAF from FFPE lymph node tissue samples. Comparison experiments on adjacent tissue sections using BDA Sanger, immunohistochemistry (IHC), digital droplet PCR (ddPCR), and NGS showed 100% concordance among all 4 methods for samples with BRAF mutations at ≥ 1% VAF, though ddPCR did not distinguish the V600K mutation from the V600E mutation. BDA Sanger, ddPCR, and NGS (with orthogonal confirmation) were also pairwise concordant for lower VAF mutations down to 0.26% VAF, but IHC produced a false negative. Thus, we have shown that Sanger sequencing can be effective for rapid detection and quantitation of multiple low VAF BRAF mutations from FFPE samples. BDA Sanger method also enabled detection and quantitation of less frequent, potentially actionable non-V600 mutations as demonstrated by synthetic samples.
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- 2021
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5. Screening hydrogels for antifibrotic properties by implanting cellularly barcoded alginates in mice and a non-human primate
- Author
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Sudip Mukherjee, Boram Kim, Lauren Y. Cheng, Michael David Doerfert, Jiaming Li, Andrea Hernandez, Lily Liang, Maria I. Jarvis, Peter D. Rios, Sofia Ghani, Ira Joshi, Douglas Isa, Trisha Ray, Tanguy Terlier, Cody Fell, Ping Song, Roberto N. Miranda, Jose Oberholzer, David Yu Zhang, and Omid Veiseh
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Biomedical Engineering ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Bioengineering ,Computer Science Applications ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2023
6. High sensitivity sanger sequencing detection of BRAF mutations in metastatic melanoma FFPE tissue specimens
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Michael T. Tetzlaff, Lauren E. Haydu, Jeffrey E. Gershenwald, David Zhang, Lauren Y. Cheng, Ping Song, Michael A. Davies, Jianyi Nie, and Lawrence N. Kwong
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Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Skin Neoplasms ,Tissue Fixation ,Formalin fixed paraffin embedded ,Concordance ,Science ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Locus (genetics) ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Tumour biomarkers ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Melanoma ,Gene ,Retrospective Studies ,Sanger sequencing ,Mutation ,Paraffin Embedding ,Multidisciplinary ,Diagnostic markers ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Oncogenes ,Molecular biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,symbols ,Immunohistochemistry ,Medicine ,V600E - Abstract
Mutations in the BRAF gene at or near the p. V600 locus are informative for therapy selection, but current methods for analyzing FFPE tissue DNA generally have a limit of detection of 5% variant allele frequency (VAF), or are limited to the single variant (V600E). These can result in false negatives for samples with low VAFs due to low tumor content or subclonal heterogeneity, or harbor non-V600 mutations. Here, we show that Sanger sequencing using the NuProbe VarTrace BRAF assay, based on the Blocker Displacement Amplification (BDA) technology, is capable of detecting BRAF V600 mutations down to 0.20% VAF from FFPE lymph node tissue samples. Comparison experiments on adjacent tissue sections using BDA Sanger, immunohistochemistry (IHC), digital droplet PCR (ddPCR), and NGS showed 100% concordance among all 4 methods for samples with BRAF mutations at ≥ 1% VAF, though ddPCR did not distinguish the V600K mutation from the V600E mutation. BDA Sanger, ddPCR, and NGS (with orthogonal confirmation) were also pairwise concordant for lower VAF mutations down to 0.26% VAF, but IHC produced a false negative. Thus, we have shown that Sanger sequencing can be effective for rapid detection and quantitation of multiple low VAF BRAF mutations from FFPE samples. BDA Sanger method also enabled detection and quantitation of less frequent, potentially actionable non-V600 mutations as demonstrated by synthetic samples.
- Published
- 2021
7. Oncogene Concatenated Enriched Amplicon Nanopore Sequencing for rapid, accurate, and affordable somatic mutation detection
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Lauren Y. Cheng, David Zhang, Mitesh J. Borad, Lawrence N. Kwong, Ping Song, Phillip James, Sherry X. Chen, Daniel J. Turner, and Deepak Thirunavukarasu
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Lung Neoplasms ,QH301-705.5 ,Somatic cell ,Method ,Computational biology ,QH426-470 ,Biology ,Germline mutation ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Neoplasms ,Genetics ,False positive paradox ,Humans ,Digital polymerase chain reaction ,Biology (General) ,Melanoma ,Cancer ,Oncogene ,Myeloid leukemia ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Variant allele ,Oncogenes ,Amplicon ,Human genetics ,Mutation detection ,Nanopore Sequencing ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,Mutation ,Non small cell ,Nanopore sequencing - Abstract
Nanopore sequencing is more than 10-fold faster than sequencing-by-synthesis and provides reads that are roughly 100-fold longer. However, nanopore sequencing’s 7.5% intrinsic error rate renders it difficult to call somatic mutations with low variant allele frequencies (VAFs) without significant false positives. Here, we introduce the Oncogene Concatenated Enriched Amplicon Nanopore Sequencing (OCEANS) method, in which variants with low VAFs are selectively amplified and subsequently concatenated for nanopore sequencing. OCEANS allows accurate detection of somatic mutations with VAF limits of detection between 0.05% and ≤ 1%. We constructed 4 distinct multi-gene OCEANS panels targeting recurrent mutations in acute myeloid leukemia, melanoma, non-small-cell lung cancer, and hepatocellular carcinoma. Comparison experiments against Illumina NGS showed 99.79% to 99.99% area under the receiver-operator curve for these panels on clinical FFPE tumor samples. Furthermore, we identified a significant number of mutations below the standard NGS limit of detection in clinical tissue samples using each OCEANS panel. Comparison against digital PCR on 10 of putative mutations at ≤1% VAF showed 9 concordant positive calls with VAFs between 0.02% and 0.66%. By overcoming the primary challenge of nanopore sequencing on detecting low VAF single nucleotide variant mutations, OCEANS is poised to enable same-day clinical sequencing panels.
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- 2021
8. Detecting and Quantitating Low Fraction DNA Variants with Low-Depth Sequencing
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Alessandro Pinto, Lauren Y. Cheng, Sherry X. Chen, Yan Helen Yan, David Zhang, Peng Dai, Abhijit A. Patel, and Ping Song
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0303 health sciences ,Melanoma ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Computational biology ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,DNA sequencing ,Deep sequencing ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Multiplex ,Allele frequency ,Gene ,DNA ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
DNA sequence variants with low allele frequencies below 1% are difficult to detect and quantitate by sequencing, due to the intrinsic error of sequencing-by-synthesis (NGS). Unique molecular identifier barcodes can in principle help NGS detect mutations down to 0.1% variant allele frequency (VAF), but require extremely high sequencing depths of over 25,000x, rendering high sensitivity mutation detection out of reach for most research and clinical samples. Here, we present the multiplex blocker displacement amplification (mBDA) method to selectively enrich DNA variants by an average of 300-fold in highly multiplexed NGS settings. On a 80-plex human single nucleotide polymorphism panel, mBDA achieves a 0.019% VAF limit of detection for single nucleotide variants, using only 250x sequencing depth, and detects human cell line contamination down to 0.07%. Using this technology, we constructed a 16-plex melanoma NGS panel covering 145 actionable mutations across 9 genes, and applied it to 19 fresh/frozen tumor biopsy tissue samples with high tumor fractions. We found low VAF mutations (0.2% to 5%) in 37% of the samples (7/19, 95% confidence interval 19%-58%). These results suggest that tumor heterogeneity could be significantly more pervasive than previously recognized, and can contribute significantly to acquired drug resistance to targeted therapies. We also validate mBDA panels on clinical cell-free DNA samples from lung cancer patients.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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