how to understand the MRCA of the sampled cells in this article?
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3.5 years ago
2001linana ▴ 40

I was reading an article with title "using single cell sequencing data to model the evolutionary history of a tumor" https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2105-15-27. This article provide a computational method to infer the evolutionary mutation tree, incorporating the temporal order of mutation sites and single cell sequencing errors. Moreover, it estimates the proportion of time from the earliest mutation event of the sample to the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of the sample of cells. It's here which confuses me. What is this MRCA of the sample of cells? Moreover, in the notes following table 1, "For example, 0,1 and 2 of the site for SESN2 represent DNA base composition of CC, CT, and TT, respectively". How to understand it then?

RNA-Seq sequencing • 567 views
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I think I understand it now. So, a bunch of tumor cells are sampled and single-cell sequencing technology is processed. The life time of these cells are different, i,e, the birth time and death time of these cells are different. Some cells are the ancestor of the other cells. So, there is one cell, which is the MRCA of all the sampled cells. The earliest mutation event might occur outside of this cell? See, I was confused about this point. Any comments are greatly appreciated.

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