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Development of an AmpliSeq (TM) Panel for Next-Generation Sequencing of a Set of Genetic Predictors of Persisting Pain

Authors :
Kringel, D.
Kaunisto, M.A.
Lippmann, C.
Kalso, E.
Lötsch, J.
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
University of Helsinki
Doctoral Programme in Clinical Research
Doctoral Programme Brain & Mind
Doctoral Programme in Drug Research
Eija Kalso / Principal Investigator
Clinicum
Anestesiologian yksikkö
Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics
HUS Perioperative, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine
Zanger, Ulrich M.
Publica
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Many gene variants modulate the individual perception of pain and possibly also its persistence. The limited selection of single functional variants is increasingly being replaced by analyses of the full coding and regulatory sequences of pain-relevant genes accessible by means of next generation sequencing (NGS). Methods: An NGS panel was created for a set of 77 human genes selected following different lines of evidence supporting their role in persisting pain. To address the role of these candidate genes, we established a sequencing assay based on a custom AmpliSeq (TM) panel to assess the exomic sequences in 72 subjects of Caucasian ethnicity. To identify the systems biology of the genes, the biological functions associated with these genes were assessed by means of a computational over-representation analysis. Results: Sequencing generated a median of 2.85 . 10(6) reads per run with a mean depth close to 200 reads, mean read length of 205 called bases and an average chip loading of 71%. A total of 3,185 genetic variants were called. A computational functional genomics analysis indicated that the proposed NGS gene panel covers biological processes identified previously as characterizing the functional genomics of persisting pain. Conclusion: Results of the NGS assay suggested that the produced nucleotide sequences are comparable to those earned with the classical Sanger sequencing technique. The assay is applicable for small to large-scale experimental setups to target the accessing of information about any nucleotide within the addressed genes in a study cohort.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..96b22c01c05cf4ba8170859df5f73303