Mutation analysis of dystrophin gene using multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification (MLPA)
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Abstract
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an allelic X-linked progressive muscle-wasting
disease, and its allelic form Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) are one of the most
common single-gene disorders caused by mutations in the DMD gene (also dystrophin
gene), the longest known human gene ranging 2.4 Mb, encoding a 427 kDa cytoskeletal
protein called dystrophin. Due to the lack of reliable genetic diagnostic tool in Nepal the
diagnosis of these genetic diseases are narrowed to phenotypic and clinical diagnoses.
Besides, the lack of even the base line data of these genetic diseases has barred the
progression of the further research of these genetic diseases in Nepal.This research has
been carried out with the aim to introduce Multiplex ligation dependent probe
amplification (MLPA) as one of the convenient molecular diagnostic tool in diagnosis of
the genetic diseases as DMD/BMD.
In this research, DNA was extracted from the blood samples of DMD/BMD patients and
from the normal male and female to be taken as the reference samples. DNA samples so
extracted were then amplified in the thermocycler by using the MLPA assay. The PCR
products of the test samples and the reference samples so obtained were run on the
capillary electrophoresis (CE) and the data were analysed. Using an algorithm of MLPA,
26 total samples were assayed. The capillary electrophoresis run (ABI-310 genetic
analyzer) demonstrated that it could pick up the deletions in 14 of the 21 test samples
considered. Consequently, MLPA was efficient in accurately confirming mutations in
about 67% of all cases. Most prevalent exonic deletion regions were found to be
confined in the exon 7-14, the proximal zone and 45-53, the first half of C-terminal
domain. The reading frame (in-frame or out-frame) were determined by using the “DMD
exonic deletions/duplications reading frame checker 1.9” as recommended by MRCHolland,
which need to be confirmed by sequencing.No novel mutations were identified in
this study. Overall, this approach confirmed mutations in 67% of the patients in our
study which is compatible with the recent studies in Chinese and Indian population.
Among the 21 test samples used MLPA could not diagnose the mutation in some of the
samples which were clinically diagnosed as DMD/BMD. This result aware us that in order
to know the exact point of mutation and to know exactly which of the exon is deleted or
duplicated further sequencing should be done. But still the efficiency of this MLPA assay
makes it a rapid, robust, efficient and reliable genetic tool in the diagnosis of genetic
disorders. The systematic approach/algorithm used in this study offers the best possible
less invasive and effective mutation analysis in the context of Nepal.
Key words: Dystrophin gene, Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and Becker muscular
dystrophy (BMD), Multiplex Ligation Dependent Probe Amplification (MLPA), capillary
electrophoresis (CE) 1
