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ATAC-seq identifies thousands of extrachromosomal circular DNA in cancer and cell lines

Pankaj Kumar, Shashi Kiran, Shekhar Saha, Zhangli Su, Teressa Paulsen, Ajay Chatrath, Yoshiyuki Shibata, Etsuko Shibata, Anindya Dutta

2020Science Advances205 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Extrachromosomal circular DNAs (eccDNAs) are somatically mosaic and contribute to intercellular heterogeneity in normal and tumor cells. Because short eccDNAs are poorly chromatinized, we hypothesized that they are sequenced by tagmentation in ATAC-seq experiments without any enrichment of circular DNA. Indeed, ATAC-seq identified thousands of eccDNAs in cell lines that were validated by inverse PCR and by metaphase FISH. ATAC-seq in gliomas and glioblastomas identify hundreds of eccDNAs, including one containing the well-known EGFR gene amplicon from chr7. More than 18,000 eccDNAs, many carrying known cancer driver genes, are identified in a pan-cancer analysis of ATAC-seq libraries from 23 tumor types. Somatically mosaic eccDNAs are identified by ATAC-seq even before amplification is recognized by genome-wide copy number variation measurements. Thus, ATAC-seq is a sensitive method to detect eccDNA present in a tumor at the pre-amplification stage and can be used to predict resistance to therapy.

Topics & Concepts

Extrachromosomal DNAAmpliconBiologyGenomeComputational biologyGeneticsGeneDNAPolymerase chain reactionCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsGenetic factors in colorectal cancerCancer Cells and Metastasis