| Literature DB >> 27766059 |
Ming Chen1,2,3,4,5,6, Shun-Ping Chang1,2, Gwo-Chin Ma1,2,7,8, Wen-Hsian Lin1,2, Hsin-Fu Chen3, Shee-Uan Chen3, Horng-Der Tsai7, Feng-Po Tsai9, Ming-Ching Shen10.
Abstract
Preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) is a powerful tool to tackle the transmission of monogenic inherited disorders in families carrying the diseases from generation to generation. It currently remains a challenging task, despite PGD having been developed over 25 years ago. The major difficulty is it does not have an easy and general formula for all mutations. Different gene locus needs individualized, customized design to make the diagnosis accurate enough to be applied on PGD, in which the quantity of DNA is scanty, whereas timely laboratory diagnosis is mandatory if fresh embryo transfer is desired occasionally. Indicators for outcome assessment of a successful PGD program include the successful diagnosis rate on blastomeres (Day 3 cleavage-stage embryo biopsy) or trophectoderm cells (Day 5/6 blastocyst biopsy), the implantation rate per embryo transferred, and the livebirth rate per oocyte retrieval cycle. Hemophilia A (HA) is an X-linked recessive bleeding disorder caused by various types of pathological defects in the factor VIII gene (F8). The mutation spectrum of the F8 is complex, according to our previous report, including large segmental intra-gene inversions, large segmental deletions spanning a few exons, point mutations, and total deletion caused by chromosomal structural rearrangements. In this review, the molecular methodologies used to tackle different mutants of the F8 in the PGD of HA are to be explained, and the experiences of successful use of amplification refractory mutation system-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (ARMS-qPCR) and linkage analysis for PGD of HA in our laboratory are also provided.Entities:
Keywords: ARMS-qPCR; Linkage analysis; PGD; Polymorphism; STR marker
Year: 2016 PMID: 27766059 PMCID: PMC5056473 DOI: 10.1186/s12959-016-0098-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thromb J ISSN: 1477-9560
Genotype-phenotype relationship, genetic testing and preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) in hemophilia A
| Mutation type | Frequency of occurrancea | Clinical severityb | Test method | PGD method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inversion | 47 % | Severe | • I-PCR (for INV22) | • Linkage analysis |
| Point mutation | 28 % | Mild, Moderate, Severe | Direct DNA sequencing | • ARMS-qPCR |
| Small deletion/insertion (<1 exon) | 16 % | Severe (majority) | Direct DNA sequencing | • ARMS-qPCR |
| Large deletion (≥1 exon) | 3 % | Severe (majority) | MLPA | • Linkage analysis |
| Others (e.g., Complex rearrangement) | NA | Severe (majority) | Depending on mutation entities | • Linkage analysis |
MLPA multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, I-PCR inverse polymerase chain reaction, ARMS amplification refractory mutation system, NA not available
aSee the review in Gouw et al., [12]
bHA patients are clinically divided into three different severities based on the residual FVIII coagulant activity (FVIII:C): severe (FVIII:C < 1 % of normal level), moderate (FVIII:C is 1–5 % of normal level) and mild (FVIII:C is 5–30 % of normal level)
Fig. 1Genetic testing for a female patient (indicated by an arrow) with severe hemophilia A. a Cytogenetic analysis identifies a 45,X [22]/46,X,idic(X)(q21) [8] mosaicism, indicating at least one F8 allele loss. b MLPA analysis for the F8 gene of the patient detects only copy of exon 23–26 peaks indicating an exon 1–22 deletion in the allele on her “morphologically-normal” X-chromosome. MLPA for the patient’s mother detects about 1/2 DNA dosage of exon1-22 indicating a carrier of exon 1–22 deletion. Arabic numbers, the exon numbers of the F8 gene. “c”, the internal controls used in MLPA. “?”, an unexpectedly amplified peck which is not illustrated in the instruction of the MLPA FVIII kit, SALSA P178. “*”, loss of one copy in exons. “▼”, loss of two copies in exons
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of a duplex-nested ARMS-qPCR for PGD of a splicing-site point mutation, located at the junction of intron 10 and exon 11 of F8, c.1538-1G > A (bold letter). a Primers for duplex-nested PCR were first designed to amplify the region covering the position of the mutation. OF and OR indicate the outer primer set, and IF and IR indicate inner primer set. b Primers specific for the amplification of the wild-type (WT) and mutant (MU) alleles, respectively, were subsequently used for ARMS-qPCR where the duplex-nested PCR amplicon was used as DNA template. c Representative ARMS-qPCR results for wild-type control (homozygous WT/WT or hemizygous WT), female carrier (heterozygous WT/MU), and affected male individual (hemizygous MU)
Fig. 3Exemplified PGD of F8 defects for two hemophilia A families: family 1 (c.1538-1G > A mutation) and family 2 (INV22). PGD was performed using ARMS-qPCR, together with linkage analysis for five informative short tandem repeat (STR) markers ordered from centromere (top) to telomere (bottom). The numbers in STR markers represent the sizes of PCR amplicons in base pair (bp). In family 1, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing with 12 STR markers was also performed. PGD for hemophilia A resulted in a birth of healthy girl (1–4), who was HLA matched to the affected sibling (1–3). In family 2, PGD for INV22 was directly performed by linkage analysis. The maternal allele linked to INV22 was evidenced by comparing the STR profile with that of case 2–3 and 2–4. In the pedigree, squares represent males, and circles represent females. Line through, filled, dotted and open the symbols represent deceased, affected, carrier and unaffected individuals respectively