1. Rapid and reliable detection of exon rearrangements in various movement disorders genes by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification
- Author
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Christine Klein, Anthony E. Lang, Angela M. Kaindl, Peter P. Pramstaller, Peter Vieregge, Katja Hedrich, Christian Beetz, David Simon, Anne Grünewald, Ana Djarmati, Miodrag Guzvic, and Anders O H Nygren
- Subjects
Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,myoclonus-dystonia ,Gene dosage ,03 medical and health sciences ,Exon ,0302 clinical medicine ,Parkinsons disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Multiplex ,Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification ,multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification ,dopa-responsive dystonia ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic testing ,Gene Rearrangement ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Movement Disorders ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Point mutation ,exon rearrangements ,Reproducibility of Results ,Exons ,Gene rearrangement ,Molecular diagnostics ,3. Good health ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Because of the occurrence of different types of mutations, comprehensive genetic testing for Parkinsons disease (PD), dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD), and myoclonus-dystonia (M-D) should include screening for small sequence changes and for large exonic rearrangements in disease-associated genes. In diagnostic and research settings, the latter is frequently omitted or performed by laborious and expensive quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). Our study aimed to evaluate the utility of a novel method, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), in molecular diagnostics of movement disorders. We have analyzed, by MLPA, genomic DNA from 21 patients affected with PD, DRD, or M-D, in which the presence of exon rearrangement(s) (n = 20) or of a specific point mutation (detectable by MLPA, n = 1) had been established previously by qPCR or sequencing. In parallel, we have studied, in a blinded fashion, DNA from 49 patients with an unknown mutational status. Exon rearrangements were evident in 20 samples with previously established mutations; in the 21st sample the known specific point mutation was detected. We conclude that MLPA represents a reliable method for large-scale and cost-effective gene dosage screening of various movement disorders genes. This finding reaches far beyond a simple technical advancement and has two major implications: (1) By improving the availability of comprehensive genetic testing, it supports clinicians in the establishment of a genetically defined diagnosis; (2) By enabling gene dosage testing of several genes simultaneously, it significantly facilitates the mutational analysis of large patient and control populations and thereby constitutes the prerequisite for meaningful phenotype-genotype correlations. (C) 2007 Movement Disorder Society.
- Published
- 2007
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