purify tumor samples and remove normal cells
2
1
Entering edit mode
8.0 years ago

I know the tumor samples are mixture of tumor and normal cells. I want to remove normal cells from my tumor samples. Is it possible?

prurify tumor whole exome sequencing • 1.8k views
ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode

If this question about "how to do this experimentally" then you are posting in the wrong forum.

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

Agreed, without any information about what you are doing, it is hard to help. Is this already a sequenced sample? Do you have any identifiers like barcodes or tags of some kind?

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

I have paired tumor and normal samples and they are WES data. I can calculate read count from them. Sequencing data on tumor samples are derived from a mixed population of cells. So my question is that can I separate tumor and normal cell in tumor samples?

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode
8.0 years ago

Since you are not sequencing single cells, you cannot easily "remove" the normal cells. But you probably did not mean that literally anyways.

By comparing tumor and normal, you can detect alterations that are present only in tumor using somatic variant callers (GATK, MuTect, Strelka, ...).

Quantifying the normal contamination in the tumor sample is a bit more complicated, but there are a lot of other tools published recently (e.g. FACETS, Sequenza, ...) for paired whole-exome sequencing.

We recently published the Bioconductor package PureCN that in addition adjusts read counts of somatic and germline variants in a VCF for normal contamination and allele-specific copy number (paired or unpaired whole-exome sequencing).

You can finally use tools like PyClone or SciClone to "cluster" the tumor cells into different clones.

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

Thank you. I will try FACETS and also your package.

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode
8.0 years ago
dyollluap ▴ 310

If you process them as tumor-normal pairs using variant calling pipelines you can identify variant features unique to the tumor. Try GATK for best practice pipeline guidelines and a ready package.

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1309 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6