| Literature DB >> 12153702 |
Kyoko Shibanuma1, Zhi-Bin Tong, Vien H Vanderhoof, Konstantina Vanevski, Lawrence M Nelson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spontaneous premature ovarian failure presents most commonly with secondary amenorrhea. Young women with the disorder are infertile and experience the symptoms and sequelae of estrogen deficiency. The mechanisms that give rise to spontaneous premature ovarian failure are largely unknown, but many reports suggest a genetic mechanism in some cases. The small family size associated with infertility makes genetic linkage analysis studies extremely difficult. Another approach that has proven successful has been to examine candidate genes based on known genetic phenotypes in other species. Studies in mice have demonstrated that c-kit, a transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor, plays a critical role in gametogenesis. Here we test the hypothesis that human KIT mutations might be a cause of spontaneous premature ovarian failure. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12153702 PMCID: PMC122069 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6874-2-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Primer sets and conditions for amplification of human KIT exons. Forward and reverse primers flanking each of the 21 exons are shown. The size of each exon-coding region, the size of each PCR product generated by each set of primers, and the respective annealing temperatures are indicated. Sequences marked by a * are derived from Spritz et al..[28]
| Exon No | Exon # Size (bp) | Primers | PCR product Size (bp) | Annealing Tm(°C) |
| Forward Reverse | ||||
| 1 | 88(67) | 5'GGACCAGAGCTCGGATC3' / 3'AGTCCTCTCTCCGGATG5' | 198 | 62 |
| 2 | 270 | 5'CTCAGTATTGGAAGAAGTGC3' / 3'TATCTATGGCTCAGTCATCC5' | 438 | 55 |
| 3 | 282 | 5'GCTTCTATAGATCCTGCC3' / 3'GATCAACGAGAAGAGAAGTC5' * | 367 | 55 |
| 4 | 137 | 5'TGTACACATTTGAGGAGAAA3' * / 3'CTGACAGACGCACTAGTCG5' * | 330 | 55 |
| 5 | 169 | 5'TGGAGAAGTTAATTGCTGCT3' * / 3'TGTGCTTTCATTGCAAGAGG5' | 435 | 55 |
| 6 | 190 | 5'TTGTAATTCCAAGATGAGG3' * / 3'TACTAGGATGAGGACATAGG5' | 422 | 55 |
| 7 | 116 | 5'TATGTGTGTGCGTGTTTATG3' * / 3'CAAGTTGAGTCCTTGCAGCTG5' * | 372 | 62 |
| 8 | 115 | 5'CTCCTTGGTTCAGATTCTGC3' / 3'GTGAATTGCAGTCCTTCC5' | 321 | 55 |
| 9 | 194 | 5'TATGCCACATCCCAAGTG3' / 3'GGTGTGATGCATGTATTACC5' | 390 | 55 |
| 10 | 107 | 5'ACATAGCTTTGCATCCTGC3' / 3'ATTGTCTCAGTCATTAGAGCAC5' * | 280 | 55 |
| 11 | 127 | 5'GAGTGCTCTAATGACTGAG3' / 3'CCACTGGAGTTCCTTAAAG5' | 266 | 56 |
| 12 | 105 | 5'ATGGTCCTTCAATTCCACC3' / 3'TTCTGTCAAATGGGCACTC5' | 270 | 55 |
| 13 | 111 | 5'GACATCAGTTTGCCAGTTG3' / 3'GCAAGAGAGAACAACAG5' | 296 | 58 |
| 14 | 151 | 5'GACTAAGTAGTCTGATCC3' / 3'ACCCCATGAACTGCCTGTC5' * | 327 | 55 |
| 15 | 92 | 5'TAGAGCATGACCCATGAG3' / 3'ACCCACTTGCAACCCTAACT5' * | 325 | 60 |
| 16 | 128 | 5'GGTATGTCATTGCCACTG3' / 3'GGCTCTAAAATGCTCTGTTCT5' * | 296 | 55 |
| 17 | 123 | 5'GTGAACATCATTCAAGGCG3' / 3'TTACATTATGAAAGTCACAGG5' * | 390 | 55 |
| 18 | 112 | 5'CACATTTCAGCAACAGC3' / 3'CCTTCCTTGATCATCTTGT5' * | 382 | 53 |
| 19 | 100 | 5'CTCAGAGCATCTTCTTGAAG3' / 3'ACATCTGGGTTTCTGTCTC5' | 252 | 58 |
| 20 | 106 | 5'CCATATGTCCAGTTGCATAG3' / 3'TACCTGAAGCCCAATTTGC5' | 257 | 60 |
| 21 | 2407(129) | 5'TGGCCACAAAGTTCTTGG3' / 3'TATCCTGGAGTTGGATGC5' | 369 | 55 |
Figure 1Human . A. Schematic representation of exon-intron map of human KIT. It is composed of 21 exons and 20 introns. Vertical bars and horizontal solid lines represent the exons and introns, respectively. The // indicates that these introns are not in scale. Arabic numbers above each of the vertical bars indicate the exon number. Modified from Giebel et al.[27]. B. Analysis of PCR products of the human KIT gene. Human genomic DNA spanning each of the human KIT exons were amplified using specific primer pairs. PCR products for each of the exons were separated by 1.5% agarose-electrophoresis and stained with ethidium-bromide. The Arabic numbers above each of the PCR products represent the exon number. DNA size markers (φ X174 RF DNA/HaeIII) are shown at the left of the panel (M).
Figure 2SSCP analysis of The PCR products were separated on 20% TBE-acrylamide gel electrophoresis and stained with ethidium bromide. SSCP analysis of samples from three normal control women and three patients with spontaneous premature ovarian failure are shown for exon 10,16, and 17. DNA mobility of PCR products from exons 10 and 16 was altered in one patient (Lane 4). One patient showed an alternation of DNA mobility in the PCR product from exon 17 (Lane 5). Also shown is the DNA mobility of samples from normal women (Lanes 1–3) and from a representative patient with no changes in DNA mobility (Lane 6).
Figure 3DNA sequence analysis of a Electropherogram displaying the sequence of the KIT variant of the intronic sequence downstream of exon 16 compared to the wild-type sequence. Arrows indicate a deletion of 5T nucleotides in the variant as compared to a normal series of 22 consecutive T nucleotides in the wild-type.
Figure 4Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of a Undigested DNA and wild-type DNA digested with Ssp I gives a single band of 390 bp. Homozygosity for the variant yields two fragments of 207 and 183 bp. A heterozygote carrier would have demonstrated all three of the fragment lengths. Therefore, this patient is homozygous for this variant.