| Literature DB >> 24818137 |
Igor A Sobenin1, Konstantin Y Mitrofanov2, Andrey V Zhelankin1, Margarita A Sazonova1, Anton Y Postnov3, Victor V Revin4, Yuri V Bobryshev5, Alexander N Orekhov6.
Abstract
The role of alterations of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in the development of human pathologies is not understood well. Most of mitochondrial mutations are characterized by the phenomenon of heteroplasmy which is defined as the presence of a mixture of more than one type of an organellar genome within a cell or tissue. The level of heteroplasmy varies in wide range, and the expression of disease is dependent on the percent of alleles bearing mutations, thus allowing consumption that an upper threshold level may exist beyond which the mitochondrial function collapses. Recent findings have demonstrated that some mtDNA heteroplasmic mutations are associated with widely spread chronic diseases, including atherosclerosis and cancer. Actually, each etiological mtDNA mutation has its own heteroplasmy threshold that needs to be measured. Therefore, quantitative evaluation of a mutant allele of mitochondrial genome is an obvious methodological challenge, since it may be a keystone for diagnostics of individual genetic predisposition to the disease. This review provides a comprehensive comparison of methods applicable to the measurement of heteroplasmy level of mitochondrial mutations associated with the development of pathology, in particular, in atherosclerosis and its clinical manifestations.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24818137 PMCID: PMC4003915 DOI: 10.1155/2014/292017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Comparison of methods for the quantitative analysis of mtDNA heteroplasmy.
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Invasive cleavage of oligonucleotide probe (invader assay) | (1) Allows SNP-analysis in a single reaction tube | (1) Requires a long incubation time (3-4 h) |
|
| ||
| Pyrosequencing | (1) Allows to estimate the exact nucleotide sequence and its changes | (1) Requires special equipment |
|
| ||
| Real-time amplification refractory mutation system for quantitative PCR analysis | (1) Simple | (1) It is difficult to find the optimal allele-specific primers |
|
| ||
| 454 sequencing (Roche) | (1) High read length | (1) High cost of the instrument and reagents for the single run of GS FLX titanium |
|
| ||
| Illumina sequencing with Illumina MiSeq | (1) Relatively low cost of the instrument and reagents for the single run | (1) Relatively few reads |
|
| ||
| Illumina HiScanSQ | (1) Allows versatile genomic research and is scalable in future | (1) Higher cost per 1 Mb read than HiSeq for large amounts of data |
|
| ||
| Illumina GAIIx | (1) Lower instrument cost than HiSeq | (1) Higher cost per 1 Mb read than HiSeq |
|
| ||
| Illumina HiSeq 1000 and 2000 | (1) The largest number of reads | (1) High instrument cost |
|
| ||
| Applied Biosystems SOLiD sequencing | (1) Each lane of Flow-Chip can be run independently | (1) High-performance devices have become available only from 2011 |
|
| ||
| HRM analysis | (1) Low consumption of reagents with minor losses: it takes 20 | (1) Method is not adapted for the quantitative analysis of mitochondrial mutations |
|
| ||
| TGGE | (1) Does not require denaturing agents | The exact nature of the nucleotide changes is unknown |
|
| ||
| HPLC | (1) High accuracy | (1) High cost of columns |
|
| ||
| Endonuclease method using Surveyor nuclease | (1) Simplicity | (1) Qualitative estimation |
|
| ||
| Sanger sequencing | (1) Using dideoxynucleotides with fluorescent labels with different emission wavelengths allows to carry out the reaction in a single tube | (1) Complexity of the electrophoretic separation of fragments |
|
| ||
| Snapshot | (1) A reliable method to identify uncharacterized nucleotide damage | (1) Relativeness of the results |
The basic methods suitable for quantitative measurement of mtDNA heteroplasmy based on qPCR with fluorescence detection.
| Principle of operation | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nonspecific methods | |||
| Intercalating dyes (SYBR Green I and others) | The fluorescence signal increases due to an intercalating dye binding to double-stranded DNA | High level of signal, the same approach to the design of various experiments | False positive results are possible due to primer-dimers or nonspecific amplicons, so these methods are not immediately suitable for diagnostic purposes |
| Amplifluor | Allele-specific PCR reveals a hairpin structure of fluorescently labeled oligonucleotides | ||
| Lux | The fluorescence signal changes when the fluorescently labeled primer is included in the PCR product | ||
| DzyNA-PCR | Binding of the probe with the PCR products generates restriction enzyme recognition site | ||
| Specific methods | |||
| TaqMan | The dye and the quencher are separated by 5′-exonuclease activity of Taq-polymerase | High signal level, simplicity of design, and synthesis | Problems with the discrimination of some sequences |
| Molecular beacons | Dye and quencher are separated after binding of the probe to the amplicon and disclosure of the hairpin | Good signal-to-noise ratio | The low level signal due to reaction kinetics |
| Eclipse | Similar to TaqMan, but is resistant to exonuclease activity of the polymerase; a signal is generated after binding of the probe to the amplicon | High signal level, simplicity of design, and synthesis | Poor signal-to-noise ratio, problems with the discrimination of some sequences |
| Hyb probes | Two dyes are converging after binding of the probes to the amplicon, the signal is generating by the FRET mechanism | Undefined | Poor signal-to-noise ratio, not suitable for all devices, the reaction requires a trimolecular interaction |
| Scorpions | The probe-primer is included in the PCR product, the signal is generated after disclosure of the hairpin and binding of the free end of the probe to the amplicon | Good signal-to-noise ratio, monomolecular reaction | Relatively expensive synthesis |