| Literature DB >> 22481874 |
Sandra Herman1, Dominic Varga, Heidrun L Deissler, Rolf Kreienberg, Helmut Deissler.
Abstract
We describe a family with a history of breast and ovarian cancer in which MLPA analysis of the BRCA1 gene pointed to a deletion including a part of exon 11. Further characterization confirmed a loss of 374 bp in a region completely covered by conventional sequencing which had not revealed the deletion. Because this alteration was only detected serendipitously with an MLPA probe, we calculated the probabilities of detecting medium-sized deletions in large exons by methods including initial PCR amplification. This showed that a considerable fraction of medium-sized deletions are undetectable by currently used standard methods of mutation analyses. We conclude that long, widely overlapping amplicons should be used to minimize the risk of missing medium-sized deletions. Alternatively, large exons could be completely covered by narrow-spaced MLPA probes.Entities:
Keywords: DNA sequencing; PCR; hereditary breast cancer; model calculations; mutation analysis
Year: 2012 PMID: 22481874 PMCID: PMC3313516 DOI: 10.1590/s1415-47572012005000001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Mol Biol ISSN: 1415-4757 Impact factor: 1.771
Figure 1Detection of a medium-sized deletion in the BRCA1 gene. A: Family with a history of breast and ovarian cancer in which a deletion in BRCA1 was found. Two sisters of a woman who had developed breast cancer at age 30 harboured this mutation (M), indicated are manifestations of breast cancer (BC), ovarian cancer (OC) and colon cancer (CC). B: Characterization of the 374 bp deletion in exon 11 by long PCR. Amplified genomic regions included exon 10 (E10) and the following intron and parts of exon 11 (E11), as shown in the top scheme. The deletion in one allele resulted in double bands of longer PCR products but not of the smallest one, which was generated with the reverse primer also used in routine sequencing. The amplicon used for sequence analysis is shown in the scheme above the products of long PCR (A-E). Marker fragments labelled with an asterisk are 1500 bp, 3000 bp and 6000 bp.
Figure 2Probability of missing medium-sized deletions in long exons by sequencing of overlapping PCR products depends on the number of amplicons and the size of the overlapping regions. Based on a simplified model of deletions occurring with the same likelihood over the analysed region, and analysis with primers of constant (25 nt) lengths resulting in q amplicons of the same extent, calculations (see Results section) were performed for a region of the size of BRCA exon 11 (3426 bp). A: Sequence analysis based on 10 PCR amplicons overlapping 100 bp or 200 bp. B: Sequence analysis based on 5 PCR amplicons overlapping 100 bp or 200.