| Literature DB >> 26825750 |
Thang T Pham1, Jun Yin2,3, John S Eid1,4, Evan Adams2, Regina Lam1, Stephen W Turner1, Erick W Loomis2,5, Jun Yi Wang2, Paul J Hagerman2, Jeremiah W Hanes6.
Abstract
A gene-level targeted enrichment method for direct detection of epigenetic modifications is described. The approach is demonstrated on the CGG-repeat region of the FMR1 gene, for which large repeat expansions, hitherto refractory to sequencing, are known to cause fragile X syndrome. In addition to achieving a single-locus enrichment of nearly 700,000-fold, the elimination of all amplification steps removes PCR-induced bias in the repeat count and preserves the native epigenetic modifications of the DNA. In conjunction with the single-molecule real-time sequencing approach, this enrichment method enables direct readout of the methylation status and the CGG repeat number of the FMR1 allele(s) for a clonally derived cell line. The current method avoids potential biases introduced through chemical modification and/or amplification methods for indirect detection of CpG methylation events.Entities:
Keywords: Epigenetic modification; FMR1; Fragile X syndrome; Single molecule sequencing; Tandem repeats; Targeted enrichment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26825750 DOI: 10.1007/s00438-016-1167-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Genomics ISSN: 1617-4623 Impact factor: 3.291