| Literature DB >> 26062604 |
Ambreen Asim1, Ashok Kumar2, Srinivasan Muthuswamy3, Shalu Jain4, Sarita Agarwal5.
Abstract
Down syndrome (DS) is one of the commonest disorders with huge medical and social cost. DS is associated with number of phenotypes including congenital heart defects, leukemia, Alzeihmer's disease, Hirschsprung disease etc. DS individuals are affected by these phenotypes to a variable extent thus understanding the cause of this variation is a key challenge. In the present review article, we emphasize an overview of DS, DS-associated phenotypes diagnosis and management of the disease. The genes or miRNA involved in Down syndrome associated Alzheimer's disease, congenital heart defects (AVSD), leukemia including AMKL and ALL, hypertension and Hirschprung disease are discussed in this article. Moreover, we have also reviewed various prenatal diagnostic method from karyotyping to rapid molecular methods - MLPA, FISH, QF-PCR, PSQ, NGS and noninvasive prenatal diagnosis in detail.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26062604 PMCID: PMC4464633 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-015-0138-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Some common gene present in chromosome 21
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| 1. | APP | Amyloid beta (A4) precursor protein |
| 2. | C21 or f59: | Chromosome 21 open reading frame 59 |
| 3. | CBS | Cystathionine-beta-synthase |
| 4. | CLDN14 | Claudin 14 |
| 5. | HLCS | Holocarboxylase synthetase (biotin-(proprionyl-coenzyme a-carboxylase (ATP-hydrolysing)) ligase) |
| 6. | KCNE1 | Potassium voltage-gated channel, isk-related family, member 1 |
| 7. | KCNE 2 | Potassium voltage-gated channel, isk-related family, member 2 |
| 8. | LAD | Leukocyte adhesion deficiency |
| 9. | SOD 1 | Superoxide dismutase 1 |
| 10. | TMPRSS3 | Transmembrane protease, serine 3 |
| 11. | PCNT | Centrosomal pericentrin |
| 12. | DSCR1 | Down Syndrome critical region 1 |
| 13. | DYRK1A | Dual specificity tyrosine-(Y)-phosphorylation regulated kinase 1A |
| 14. | RRPB1 | Ribosomal RNA processing 1 homolog B |
| 15. | S100B | Calcium binding protein |
Figure 1Various conditions associated with Downs’s syndrome with its causative genes.
Common techniques used for diagnosis of Down’s syndrome along with its advantages and disadvantages
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| 1 |
| Giemsa banding (G-banding) is performed on fetal cells at metaphase stage on amniocytes (grown in vitro) or CVS. | • Suitable for low income countries where physician can be presumed to have acquired a high level of diagnostic skill in the absence of laboratory services. | • Time consuming. |
| • Resolution of special importance for the detection of structural. abnormalities may be quite low as the spontaneous dividing cells are more condensed than those obtained after cell culture in vitro. | ||||
| • In CVS, occurrence of confined placental mosaicism and occurrence of aberrant cells that do not represent the status of fetus. | ||||
| • Chances of giving a false positive and false negative result. | ||||
| 2 |
| FISH involves hybridization of selected chromosome specific DNA sequences that have been labeled with fluorescent dye to chromosome preparation. The fluorescently labeled sequences stick to corresponding DNA of chromosome and can be visualized under microscope. | • As it uses smaller probes thus the signals appears to be more distinct as dots. | • Sometimes diffused signals are obtained because it uses chromosome at interphase stage which appears less condense than those of metaphase. |
| • It uses higher number of interphase nuclei for analysis, so the problem of any suspected mosaicism is resolved. | • Time consuming since it involves preparation of slides, fluorescent microscopy and spot counting (~30min per sample is expected). | |||
| • Maternal and fetal XX is not distinguished by FISH. | ||||
| 3 |
| Involves amplification and detection of STR using fluorescently labeled primers. The product is thus visualized and quantified as peaks areas of respective length using an automated DNA sequencer with Gene Scan software. | • Highly reliable and reproducible. | • Poses a challenge in the case of mosaicism. |
| • Chances of getting false negative and false positive cases are rare. | • While testing sex chromosome abnormalities samples from normal XX female may show homozygous QF-PCR pattern indistinguishable from those produced by sample with single X as in Turner syndrome. | |||
| • Maternal contamination is easily detected. | ||||
| • Faster approach as it can give the diagnosis within 24 hours. | ||||
| 4 |
| A PCR based method for detection of targeted chromosome number abnormalities, based on the use of paralogous genes. Paralogous sequences have high degree of sequence identity but accumulate nucleotide substitution in a locus specific manner. These differences are called as paralogous sequence mismatches which can be quantified using pyrosequencing. | • The first generation design of test requires 10 separate PCR reaction per sample, which significantly reduces the sample throughput and increases the probability of handling errors. | • Expensive when compared to others. |
| • It can handle 30–40 samples in a day and report result in less than 48 hours. | ||||
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| MLPA is based on hybridization and PCR method. Divided into 4 phases: DNA denaturation, hybridization of probe to the complementary target sequence, probe ligation and PCR amplification of ligated probe. These amplified products are analysed through capillary electropheresis. | • Very short time for diagnosis (2–4 days). | • Unable to exclude low level placental and true mosaicism. |
| • Relatively low costs | ||||
| 6. |
| Clonally amplified DNA templates are sequenced in a massively parallel. It provides a digital quantitative information, in that each sequence read is a countable “sequence tag” representing an individual clonal DNA template or a single DNA molecule. | • The current time for sample processing, sequencing, and data interpretation in experienced hands is 5 to 8 days. | • The cost of sequencing is approximately $700 –$1000 per sample. |
| • Complex data analysis. |