| Literature DB >> 19835634 |
Richard R Bennett1, Hal E Schneider, Elicia Estrella, Stephanie Burgess, Andrew S Cheng, Caitlin Barrett, Va Lip, Poh San Lai, Yiping Shen, Bai-Lin Wu, Basil T Darras, Alan H Beggs, Louis M Kunkel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One of the most common and efficient methods for detecting mutations in genes is PCR amplification followed by direct sequencing. Until recently, the process of designing PCR assays has been to focus on individual assay parameters rather than concentrating on matching conditions for a set of assays. Primers for each individual assay were selected based on location and sequence concerns. The two primer sequences were then iteratively adjusted to make the individual assays work properly. This generally resulted in groups of assays with different annealing temperatures that required the use of multiple thermal cyclers or multiple passes in a single thermal cycler making diagnostic testing time-consuming, laborious and expensive.These factors have severely hampered diagnostic testing services, leaving many families without an answer for the exact cause of a familial genetic disease. A search of GeneTests for sequencing analysis of the entire coding sequence for genes that are known to cause muscular dystrophies returns only a small list of laboratories that perform comprehensive gene panels.The hypothesis for the study was that a complete set of universal assays can be designed to amplify and sequence any gene or family of genes using computer aided design tools. If true, this would allow automation and optimization of the mutation detection process resulting in reduced cost and increased throughput.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19835634 PMCID: PMC2781300 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2156-10-66
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
OMIM and Accession numbers
| DMD | 300377 | NC_000023 | 004006 | .2 | 1756 | P11532 |
| CAV3 | 601253 | NG_008797 | 033337 | .1 | 859 | P56539 |
| CAPN3 | 114240 | NG_008660 | 000070 | .2 | 825 | P20807 |
| TRIM32 | 602290 | NG_011619 | 012210 | .3 | 22954 | Q13049 |
| FKRP | 606596 | NG_008898 | 024301 | .4 | 79147 | Q9H9S5 |
| LMNA | 150330 | NG_008692 | 170707 | .2 | 4000 | P02545 |
| SGCA | 600119 | NG_008889 | 000023 | .2 | 6442 | Q16586 |
| SGCB | 600900 | NG_008891 | 000232 | .4 | 6443 | Q16585 |
| SGCG | 608896 | NG_008758 | 000231 | .2 | 6445 | Q13326 |
| SGCD | 601411 | NG_008693 | 000337 | .5 | 6444 | Q92629 |
OMIM = Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, NM_# are the RefSeq numbers for the most common muscle isoform mRNA.* version is the latest NM_# version at time of publication and also the version used for CDS nucleotide numbering in Table 7 HGVS variation nomenclature
Incidence data for three subdivisions of primary muscle disorders
| Maximum incidence | Minimum incidence | Average | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DMD/BMD | 354 | 1/2825 | 186 | 1/5376 | 270 | 1/3703 |
| Other dystrophies | 100 | 1/10000 | 41 | 1/24390 | 70 | 1/14286 |
| Congenital myopathies | 219 | 1/4566 | 100 | 1/10000 | 160 | 1/6250 |
| 673 | 1/1486 | 327 | 1/3050 | 500 | 1/2000 | |
DMD mean incidence is well established at 300 × 10-6 (Emery 2002) but data varies from country to country and survey to survey. It is unlikely to be much higher but may be as low as 169 × 10-6 (Cowan 1980). BMD frequency is based on (Emery 1991). Thankfully, both DMD and BMD incidence is probably declining annually due to genetic testing and counselling.
Other dystrophy incidence numbers are scarce to non-existent. The rough estimate maximum is extrapolated from (Bushby 2001) and minimum from (Emery 2002).
Other congenital myopathy numbers are also scarce to non-existent. The maximum estimate is extrapolated from (Nonaka 2001) as 81% of the mean DMD incidence. The minimum estimate is extrapolated from (D'Amico 2008) and (Lopate 2007).
These data were used for estimation of testing cost and should be considered as rough estimates only.
Survey of services available for DMD/BMD point mutations
| Laboratory | Pricing | TAT | comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Athena Dx Worcester, MA | $5070.00 | 6-8 weeks | |
| City of Hope Los Angeles, CA | $1860.00 | 10 weeks | |
| Emory Univ. Atlanta, GA | $2313.00 | 4-6 weeks | Resequencing array |
| CHB* | $3634.00 | 6-8 weeks | |
| U. of Utah | $1175.00 | 6 weeks | Negative -del/dup testing required |
Data gathered from GeneTests http://www.genetests.org and telephone survey of available services for DMD/BMD point mutation testing. *Children's Hospital Boston current testing based on DHPLC method, UCDS not yet priced
(Note that the survey was done in April, 2009 and the services fortunately are constantly being expanded and improved.)
Survey of services available for LGMD gene mutations
| Laboratory | Gene Panel | Genes Tested | Pricing | TAT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athena Dx Worcester, MA | Yes | CAPN3, SG's, DYSF, CAV3, FKRP, LMNA | $10,790.00 | 5-6 weeks |
| Nationwide Children's Ohio State | No | CAPN3, SG's, DYSF, CAV3, FKRP, LMNA | $874.50-$1790.75 (per gene) | 4 weeks |
| Prevention Genetics Marshfield, WI | No | CAPN3, DYSF, FKRP, LAMA2, SGCA, SGCB | $390.00-$2990.00 | 40 days/gene |
| U. of Utah | Yes (2 genes) | DYSF & CAPN3 | $1500.00 | 8 weeks |
| U of Iowa | Yes (3 genes) | SGCA, SGCB, FKRP | $905panel* | 2-4 wks |
Data gathered from GeneTests http://www.genetests.org and telephone survey of available services for LGMD gene testing. * The U of Iowa panel tests for three known mutations only, if none is positive then the entire FKRP gene is sequenced. **7 genes singly sequenced. (Note that the survey was done in April, 2009 and the services fortunately are constantly being expanded and improved.)
Figure 1Polymerase trial experiments. lane 1 DNA ladder, lanes 2-4 are DMD assay #1 lane 2 polymerase C (PC), lane 3 Roche FastStart (FS), lane 4 polymerase D (PD) lanes5-7 are DMD assay #1a lane 5 PC, lane 6 FS, lane 7 PD, lanes 8-10 are DMD assay #1b lane 8 PC, lane 9 FS, lane 10 PD, lanes 11-13 are DMD assay #2 lane 11 PC, lane 12 FS, lane 13 PD, lanes 14-16 are DMD assay #4 lane 14 PC, lane 15 FS, lane 16 PD, lanes 17-19 are DMD assay #10 lane 17 PC, lane 18 FS, lane 19 PD, lanes 20-22 are FKRP assay #24 lane 20 PC, lane 21 FS, lane 22 PD, lanes 23-25 are FKRP assay #21 lane 23 PC, lane 24 FS, lane 25 PD.
Genes covered to date
| Plate | Protein | Phenotype | # exons | # Assays |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genes | ||||
| PLATE #1 | ||||
| DMD | dystrophin | Duchenne/Becker | 79 | 128 |
| PLATE #2 | ||||
| CAV3 | caveolin | LGMD 1C | 2 | 11 |
| FKRP | fukutin related | LGMD 2I(CMD) | 4 | 18 |
| CAPN3 | calpain3 | LGMD 2A | 30 | 52 |
| TRIM32 | tripartate contain32 | LGMD 2H | 3 | 15 |
| PLATE #3 | ||||
| SGCA | sarcoglycan alpha | LGMD 2D | 10 | 13 |
| SGCB | sarcoglycan beta | LGMD 2E | 6 | 20 |
| SGCG | sarcoglycan gamma | LGMD 2C | 8 | 20 |
| SGCD | sarcoglycan delta | LGMD 2F | 10 | 17 |
| LMNA | lamin a/c | LGMD 1B(EDMD) | 12 | 15 |
Lists the genes covered by plates 1 through 3, the proteins coded by those genes, the associated phenotype when the gene is mutated, the number of exons and assays associated with each gene.
Figure 2QIAxcel gel image CAV3 assays. Columns 1 through 11 contain PCR products from control DNA for CAV3 assays. The 15 base pair and 3000 base pair bands are reference markers injected before the PCR products are injected. Note that the 46XY control DNA that was used may be heterozygous for assay cv 08. Single bands and good forward sequence for this assay in several patients' DNA has been seen. Also there is a large CA repeat in the area which renders the reverse sequence poor. See Additional file 8 for size, concentration and gene coverage details.
QIAxcel spreadsheet of size and concentration data
| Assay Name | CV01 | CV02 | CV15 | CV10 | CV19 | CV12 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| size (bp) | 621.3 | 581.4 | 605.9 | 627.7 | 489.3 | 332.4 |
| conc. (ng/uL) | 8.13 | 8.07 | 7.05 | 2.77 | 6.7 | 5.49 |
| Assay Name | CV11 | CV06 | CV16 | CV08 | CV13 | |
| size (bp) | 594.7 | 609.5 | 507.3 | 537/566 | 208.9 | |
| conc. (ng/uL) | 18.97 | 6.77 | 9.02 | 4.64/2.78 | 13.35 | |
Compare to Figure 2: QIAxcel gel image CAV3 assays
Patient samples tested to date and variations found
| Plate # | Patient # | Gene | Variation: DNA experimentally determined(protein: theoretically deduced) | Exon/Intron | CK value | Age of Onset | DYS -IHC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | B1101.1 | DMD | c [2521C>T] (p.Gln841X) | 20 | 2601 | Female->10 y/o | N/A |
| 1 | 9 | DMD | c.8038C>T(p.Arg2680X) | 55 | 11,010 | 8 | N/A |
| 1 | 174 | DMD | c.2614_2615insA (p.?) | 20 | N/A | 6 | N/A |
| 1 | 343 | DMD | c.829C>T(p.Gln277X) | 8 | 32,000 | 5 | N/A |
| 1 | 383 | DMD | c.13208_13209ins | 3'UTR | 3,935 | 11 | N/A |
| 1 | B1105.1 | DMD | no causative variation found | 1500 | 18 | ||
| 1 | B1028.1 | DMD | no causative variation found | 10,000 | 5 | absent | |
| 1 | 1 | DMD | no causative variation found | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| 1 | B646.1 | DMD | no causative variation found | 450 | 20's | ||
| 2 | B646.1 | FKRP | c [826C>A]+ [826C>A](p.Leu276>Ile) | 4 | 450 | 20's | |
| 2 | B1141.1 | CAV3 | c [84C>A]+ [=](p.Asp28Glu) | 1 | 2400 | 37 | Normal |
| 2 | B1092.1 | CAPN3 | c [551C>T(+)706G>A] (p.Thr184Met +Ala236Thr) | 4,5 | 289 | 6 | Normal |
| 2 | B1102.1 | CAPN3 | c [550delA(+)1967dupACATTTTCAAGCAG] | 4,17 | 2000 | 34 | faint |
| 2 | B1103.1 | no causative variation found | 9505 | 1 | Normal | ||
| 2 | B112.1 | no causative variation found | 156 | 1 | Normal | ||
| 2 | B1149.1 | no causative variation found | 1074 | 10 | |||
| 2 | B122.1 | no causative variation found | 593 | 2 | Normal | ||
| 2 | B695.1 | no causative variation found | 321 | 2-3 | Normal | ||
| B848.1 | no causative variation found | Normal | |||||
Far left column lists the plate number used to test the sample, the next column lists patient sample number, the next column lists the gene in which a causative or possibly causative variation was found and the next column lists variations. N/A means data not available. Note that patient samples with no causative variation found on one plate may be repeated on another plate, and that patients have not yet been tested against all three plates.
Estimated reagent and sequencing costs
| Reagent | Cost/well | Extended cost Plate 1 | Extended cost Plate 2 or 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assay | $0.03 | ||
| Fast Start | $0.34 | ||
| dNTPs | $0.04 | ||
| 10× Buffer | $0.02 | ||
| Sub Total | $0.43 | ||
| X6/5* | $0.52 | ||
| X8/7# | $0.49 | ||
| Plastic ware | $0.06 | $0.06 | $0.06 |
| QIAxcel system | $0.25 | $0.25 | $0.25 |
| AmPure | $0.07 | $0.07 | $0.07 |
| Total PCR | $0.90/patient PCR | $0.87/patient PCR | |
| Big Dye | $0.90 | $1.80/patient PCRΘ | $1.80/patient PCR |
| Buffer | $0.06 | $0.12/patient PCR | $0.12/patient PCR |
| Plate | $0.01 | $0.02/patient PCR | $0.02/patient PCR |
| CleanSeq | $0.30 | $0.60/patient well | $0.60/patient PCR |
| Plate | $0.01 | $0.02/patient PCR | $0.02/patient PCR |
| Total per patient well | $3.46 | $3.43 | |
| Total per patient | $442.88 | $329.28 | |
| $532.00 | $395.00 | ||
* for one negative control per 5 patients on plate 1; # one negative control per 7 patients on plates 2 or 3; Θ for both Forward and Reverse sequence/PCR.
20% waste value is a conservative estimate of waste established over many years and used by our clinical and research labs in calculating material waste. It includes remaining reagents in large cocktail batches and possible manual repeats.