학술논문

Combining accurate tumor genome simulation with crowdsourcing to benchmark somatic structural variant detection
Document Type
article
Source
Genome Biology. 19(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
Human Genome
Generic health relevance
Algorithms
Benchmarking
Computer Simulation
Crowdsourcing
Databases
Genetic
Genetic Variation
Genome
Human
Genomics
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Humans
Neoplasms
Software
Somatic mutations
Simulation
Structural variants
Cancer genomics
Whole-genome sequencing
ICGC-TCGA DREAM Somatic Mutation Calling Challenge Participants
Environmental Sciences
Information and Computing Sciences
Bioinformatics
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe phenotypes of cancer cells are driven in part by somatic structural variants. Structural variants can initiate tumors, enhance their aggressiveness, and provide unique therapeutic opportunities. Whole-genome sequencing of tumors can allow exhaustive identification of the specific structural variants present in an individual cancer, facilitating both clinical diagnostics and the discovery of novel mutagenic mechanisms. A plethora of somatic structural variant detection algorithms have been created to enable these discoveries; however, there are no systematic benchmarks of them. Rigorous performance evaluation of somatic structural variant detection methods has been challenged by the lack of gold standards, extensive resource requirements, and difficulties arising from the need to share personal genomic information.ResultsTo facilitate structural variant detection algorithm evaluations, we create a robust simulation framework for somatic structural variants by extending the BAMSurgeon algorithm. We then organize and enable a crowdsourced benchmarking within the ICGC-TCGA DREAM Somatic Mutation Calling Challenge (SMC-DNA). We report here the results of structural variant benchmarking on three different tumors, comprising 204 submissions from 15 teams. In addition to ranking methods, we identify characteristic error profiles of individual algorithms and general trends across them. Surprisingly, we find that ensembles of analysis pipelines do not always outperform the best individual method, indicating a need for new ways to aggregate somatic structural variant detection approaches.ConclusionsThe synthetic tumors and somatic structural variant detection leaderboards remain available as a community benchmarking resource, and BAMSurgeon is available at https://github.com/adamewing/bamsurgeon .