| Literature DB >> 23266634 |
Xiao-Ping Qi1, Zhen-Fang Du, Ju-Ming Ma, Xiao-Ling Chen, Qing Zhang, Jun Fei, Xiao-Ming Wei, Dong Chen, Hai-Ping Ke, Xuan-Zhu Liu, Feng Li, Zhen-Guang Chen, Zheng Su, Hang-Yang Jin, Wen-Ting Liu, Yan Zhao, Hu-Ling Jiang, Zhang-Zhang Lan, Peng-Fei Li, Ming-Yan Fang, Wei Dong, Xian-Ning Zhang.
Abstract
Mutation-based molecular diagnostics of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is complicated by genetic and allelic heterogeneity, large multi-exon genes, and duplication sequences of PKD1. Recently, targeted resequencing by pooling long-range polymerase chain reaction (LR-PCR) amplicons has been used in the identification of mutations in ADPKD. Despite its high sensitivity, specificity and accuracy, LR-PCR is still complicated. We performed whole-exome sequencing on two unrelated typical Chinese ADPKD probands and evaluated the effectiveness of this approach compared with Sanger sequencing. Meanwhile, we performed targeted gene and next-generation sequencing (targeted DNA-HiSeq) on 8 individuals (1 patient from one family, 5 patients and 2 normal individuals from another family). Both whole-exome sequencing and targeted DNA-HiSeq confirmed c.11364delC (p.H3788QfsX37) within the unduplicated region of PKD1 in one proband; in the other family, targeted DNA-HiSeq identified a small insertion, c.401_402insG (p.V134VfsX79), in PKD2. These methods do not overcome the screening complexity of homology. However, the true positives of variants confirmed by targeted gene and next-generation sequencing were 69.4%, 50% and 100% without a false positive in the whole coding region and the duplicated and unduplicated regions, which indicated that the screening accuracy of PKD1 and PKD2 can be largely improved by using a greater sequencing depth and elaborate design of the capture probe.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23266634 DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2012.12.060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gene ISSN: 0378-1119 Impact factor: 3.688