Since the identification of the breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2, a large number of different germline mutations in both genes have been found by conventional PCR-based mutation detection methods. Complex germline rearrangements such as those reported in the BRCA1 gene
Semiquantitative multiplex PCR: a useful tool for large rearrangement screening and characterization
β Scribed by Ana B. Garcia-Garcia; Sebastian Blesa; Sergio Martinez-Hervas; M. Luisa Mansego; Veronica Gonzalez-Albert; Juan F. Ascaso; Rafael Carmena; Jose T. Real; Felipe J. Chaves
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 386 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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β¦ Synopsis
Methods presently employed for detection of large rearrangements have several drawbacks, such as the amount of sample and time required, technical difficulty, or the probability of false-negative carriers. Using the low-density-lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) gene, whose mutations are responsible for familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), we have developed a procedure to detect large rearrangements in this gene based on semiquantitative PCR, with important improvements as compared to previous methods. Our method covers the complete LDLR gene and introduces an internal control in the reaction. The procedure discriminates the four different large rearrangements (two deletions and two insertions) that we have used as positive mutation controls (Valencia-1 to -5). All altered exons from each rearrangement are identified. Furthermore, when families from probands carrying these large rearrangements (34 members) were analyzed, our results agreed with those obtained previously with Southern blot. We have also analyzed a sample of 110 unrelated FH probands and the method has correctly identified the two different large rearrangements present and insertions or deletions as small as 1 bp. In conclusion, the method we present allows the identification of large rearrangements affecting exons of the gene, including small insertions or deletions or complete gene deletion. In addition, it constitutes a first characterization step of rearrangements, and is easy to carry out fast, and can be applied to the analysis of any gene.
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