Somatic evolution of malignant cells produces tumors composed of multiple clonal populations, distinguished in part by rearrangements and copy number changes affecting chromosomal segments. Whole genome sequencing mixes the signals of sampled populations, diluting the signals of clone-specific aberrations, and complicating estimation of clone-specific genotypes. We introduce ReMixT, a method to unmix tumor and contaminating normal signals and jointly predict mixture proportions, clone-specific segment copy number, and clone specificity of breakpoints. ReMixT is free, open-source software and is available at http://bitbucket.org/dranew/remixt .Medicine, Faculty ofScience, Faculty ofNon...
The extensive genetic heterogeneity of cancers can greatly affect therapy success due to the existen...
Summary:Copy number variation is an important and abundant source of variation in the human genome, ...
Recent tumor genome sequencing confirmed that one tumor often consists of multiple cell subpopulatio...
Abstract Somatic evolution of malignant cells produces tumors composed of multiple clonal population...
Clonal deconvolution of mutational landscapes is crucial to understand the evolutionary dynamics of ...
Supplementary methods, supplementary analyses, and additional experimental results. (PDF 35000 kb
Multistage tumorigenesis is a dynamic process characterized by the accumulation of mutations. Thus, ...
Multistage tumorigenesis is a dynamic process characterized by the accumulation of mutations. Thus, ...
Measuring gene expression of tumor clones at single-cell resolution links functional consequences to...
SummaryThe extensive genetic heterogeneity of cancers can greatly affect therapy success due to the ...
Cancers are composed of genetically distinct subpopulations of malignant cells. By sequencing DNA fr...
Phylogenetic reconstruction of cancer cell populations remains challenging. There is a particular la...
By accurately describing cancer genomes, we may link genomic mutations to phenotypic effects and eve...
Genomic aberrations such as copy number alterations (CNA) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) are hallm...
Most cancers evolve from a single founder cell through a series of clonal expansions that are driven...
The extensive genetic heterogeneity of cancers can greatly affect therapy success due to the existen...
Summary:Copy number variation is an important and abundant source of variation in the human genome, ...
Recent tumor genome sequencing confirmed that one tumor often consists of multiple cell subpopulatio...
Abstract Somatic evolution of malignant cells produces tumors composed of multiple clonal population...
Clonal deconvolution of mutational landscapes is crucial to understand the evolutionary dynamics of ...
Supplementary methods, supplementary analyses, and additional experimental results. (PDF 35000 kb
Multistage tumorigenesis is a dynamic process characterized by the accumulation of mutations. Thus, ...
Multistage tumorigenesis is a dynamic process characterized by the accumulation of mutations. Thus, ...
Measuring gene expression of tumor clones at single-cell resolution links functional consequences to...
SummaryThe extensive genetic heterogeneity of cancers can greatly affect therapy success due to the ...
Cancers are composed of genetically distinct subpopulations of malignant cells. By sequencing DNA fr...
Phylogenetic reconstruction of cancer cell populations remains challenging. There is a particular la...
By accurately describing cancer genomes, we may link genomic mutations to phenotypic effects and eve...
Genomic aberrations such as copy number alterations (CNA) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) are hallm...
Most cancers evolve from a single founder cell through a series of clonal expansions that are driven...
The extensive genetic heterogeneity of cancers can greatly affect therapy success due to the existen...
Summary:Copy number variation is an important and abundant source of variation in the human genome, ...
Recent tumor genome sequencing confirmed that one tumor often consists of multiple cell subpopulatio...