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Three novel CFTR polymorphic repeats improve segregation analysis for cystic fibrosis

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Citazione:
Three novel CFTR polymorphic repeats improve segregation analysis for cystic fibrosis / Elce, Ausilia; Boccia, Angelo; Cardillo, Giuseppe; Giordano, S; Tomaiuolo, Rossella; Paolella, Giovanni; Castaldo, Giuseppe. - In: CLINICAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0009-9147. - 55:7(2009), pp. 1372-1379. [10.1373/clinchem.2008.119545]
Abstract:
BACKGROUND:
Molecular diagnosis for cystic fibrosis (CF) is based on the direct identification of mutations in the CFTR gene [cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (ATP-binding cassette sub-family C, member 7)] (detection rate about 90% with scanning procedures) and on segregation analysis of intragenic polymorphisms for carrier and prenatal diagnosis in about 20% of CF families in which 1 or both causal mutations are unknown.
METHODS:
We identified 3 novel intragenic polymorphic repeats (IVS3polyA, IVS4polyA, and IVS10CA repeats) in the CFTR gene and developed and validated a procedure based on the PCR followed by capillary electrophoresis for large-scale analysis of these polymorphisms and the 4 previously identified microsatellites (IVS1CA, IVS8CA, IVS17bTA, and IVS17bCA repeats) in a single run. We validated the procedure for both single- and 2-cell samples (for a possible use in preimplantation diagnosis), and on a large number of CF patients bearing different genotypes and non-CF controls.
RESULTS:
The allelic distribution and heterozygosity results suggest that the 3 novel polymorphisms strongly contribute to carrier and prenatal diagnosis of CF in families in which 1 or both causal mutations have not been identified. At least 1 of the 4 previously identified microsatellites was informative in 78 of 100 unrelated CF families; at least 1 of all 7 polymorphisms was informative in 98 of the families. Finally, the analysis of haplotypes for the 7 polymorphisms revealed that most CF mutations are associated with different haplotypes, suggesting multiple slippage events but a single origin for most CFTR mutations.
CONCLUSIONS:
The analysis of the 7 polymorphisms is a rapid and efficient tool for routine carrier, prenatal, and preimplantation diagnosis of CF.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
CFTR; microsatellites; capillary electrophoresis
Elenco autori:
Elce, Ausilia; Boccia, Angelo; Cardillo, Giuseppe; Giordano, S; Tomaiuolo, Rossella; Paolella, Giovanni; Castaldo, Giuseppe
Autori di Ateneo:
TOMAIUOLO ROSSELLA
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unisr.it/handle/20.500.11768/111467
Pubblicato in:
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
Journal
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