| Literature DB >> 23354980 |
Emilia Vuttariello1, Marco Borra, Celeste Calise, Elvira Mauriello, Stefano Greggi, Aldo Vecchione, Elio Biffali, Gennaro Chiappetta.
Abstract
Hereditary cancers account for approximately 10 % of breast and ovarian cancers. Mutations of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, encoding two proteins involved in DNA repair, underlie most cases of such hereditary cancers. Women with BRCA mutations develop breast cancer in 50-80 % of cases and ovarian cancer in 10-40 % of cases. Assessing BRCA mutational status is needed to direct the clinical management of women with predisposition to these hereditary cancers. However, BRCA screening constitutes a bottleneck in terms of costs and time to deliver results. We developed a PCR-based assay using 73 primer pairs covering the entire coding regions of BRCA1 and BRCA2. PCR primers, containing at the 5' end the universal M13 primer sequences, were pre-spotted in 96-well plates. Following PCR, direct sequencing was performed using M13 primers, allowing to standardize the conditions. PCR amplification and sequencing were successful for each amplicon. We tested and validated the assay on 10 known gDNAs from patients with Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC). Our strategy is a promising time and cost-effective method to detect BRCA mutations in the clinical setting, which is essential to formulate a personalized therapy for patients with HBOC.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23354980 PMCID: PMC3641296 DOI: 10.1007/s12033-012-9646-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biotechnol ISSN: 1073-6085 Impact factor: 2.695
New primer pairs amplifying various BRCA1/2 regions
|
| Forward primer sequence | Reverse primer sequence |
|---|---|---|
Ex 1a BRCA1 | CCATCCTCTGATTGTACCTTGATT | AGCTTCGGAAATCCACTCTC |
Ex 1b BRCA1 | AGCTGACAGATGGGTATTCTTTGA | GCACCTCTTCTTCCACAAGGT |
Ex 2 BRCA1 | AATGAAGTTGTCATTTTATAAACCTTTT | GACATGTCTTTTCTTCCCTAGTATGT |
Ex 9 BRCA1 | GCTTAACTAGCATTGTACCTGC | CCAAGTCGTGTGTTTACCTATAT |
Ex 16 BRCA1 | ATTGAAAGTTGCAGAATCTG | TCTTAGTCATTAGGGAGATAC |
Ex 10 BRCA2 | GAAGGGGTGACTGACCGA | GGTATCTACAACTGTTTCATATAC |
Ex exon
Fig. 1PCR analysis of BRCA1/2 coding regions. a 1 % agarose gel electrophoresis of the PCR products to verify the correct amplification of the BRCA1/2 coding regions. MW: molecular weight marker. Each lane corresponds to the amplicon relative to the indicated BRCA1 or BRCA2 exon. In particular, for BRCA1, we divided exon 11 and exon 16 in ten and two amplicons, respectively (11.1–11.10 and 16.1–16.2); for BRCA2 we divided exon 10, exon 11, and exon 27 in three, fourteen, and two amplicons, respectively (10.1–10.3; 11.1–11.14, and 27.1–27.2). For BRCA2 only, exon 5 and exon 6, exon 19 and exon 20, exon 23 and exon 24 were amplified within the same amplicon because they were sufficiently short. b 1 % agarose gel electrophoresis to control the specificity of amplification. No bands were detected in the mix of negative controls. MW: molecular weight marker
Fig. 2Flow chart showing our experimental conditions. a Flow chart showing the timing of all the protocol steps including: DNA extraction, amplification of 73 amplicons covering all the coding regions of BRCA1 and BRCA2, PCR analysis through gel electrophoresis, purification of amplification products, setup of sequencing reaction, purification of sequencing products, and sequencing by capillary electrophoresis. The whole testing requires a time of about 2 working days, representing a rapid and cost-effective method. b Schematic representation of the experimental method for BRCA1/2 testing, showing the key role of the robotic station