| Literature DB >> 34778139 |
Honghong Zhang1, Yixi Sun2,3, Yuxia Zhu1, Jiali Hong1, Miaomiao Zheng1.
Abstract
Rett syndrome is an X-linked dominant, postnatal neurological disorder. Approximately 80-90% of classic Rett syndrome patients harbor mutations in the coding region of MECP2. Somatic or germline MECP2 mosaicism is not rare, and paternal germline MECP2 mosaicism occurs in especially high proportions. Here, we report the case of a Chinese girl with Rett syndrome in whom a heterozygous deletion was found in exon 4 of MECP2 using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. To obtain an accurate region of deletion, we narrowed down the deletion region using real-time quantitative PCR, and subsequent long-range PCR was performed to detect the deletion breakpoints. Surprisingly, three DNA bands from long-range PCR products were observed after gel electrophoresis. To exclude somatic mosaicism, we performed T-A cloning and DNA sequencing, the middle DNA band was proved to be a heteroduplex of the PCR product in vitro. Meanwhile, a prenatal diagnosis was performed for the pregnant mother of the patient. Our study showed that the patient was heterozygous for the deletion of 713-base pairs in exon 4 of MECP2 (MECP2: c.441_1153del713), resulting in a frameshift and premature termination of the 487 amino acid protein at the 154th codon. In summary, we reported a novel heterozygous deletion in the MECP2 gene with heteroduplexes of the PCR product in vitro, which can help in the genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis of disorders of MECP2 defects.Entities:
Keywords: MECP2; Rett syndrome; heteroduplexes; mosaicism; prenatal diagnosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34778139 PMCID: PMC8578848 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.748641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1(A) Detection of MECP2 exon alterations via multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA). The arrows illustrate the presumed deletions, as the area of the peaks from the female proband DNA is approximately half that of the female controls. (B) The MECP2 amplicon with MECP2-real time quantitative PCR-2 primers to narrow down the deletion breakpoints and determine the results of MLPA. MECP2 relative amount of female proband, and male fetus were half that of female control. (C) The products of long-range PCR were analyzed with 1.5% agarose gel electrophoresis. The PCR product from the proband showed three DNA bands, whereas PCR product bands of the proband's parents and the fetus, were single. (D) Three DNA bands of long-range PCR from the proband were separately cut, T-A cloned, and finally sequenced after plasmid extraction. The sequence of top DNA band was wild type; both, bottom and middle DNA bands show 713-base pairs deletion in exon 4 (c.441_1153del713), and the single band of proband's parents and the fetus were of the wild type. (E) There was no difference between the PCR products untreated (left) and treated with heating and reannealing (right) in electrophoresis analysis. The treated PCR products were denatured at 95 °C for 3 min, followed by gradual reannealing for 30 min with a temperature ramp of −1 °C/min to optimize for the formation of heteroduplexes and homoduplexes. (F) Schematic diagram of three DNA bands after PCR. The top DNA band was homoduplex of wild type, the bottom DNA band was homoduplex of mutant type, the middle DNA band was heteroduplex of wild type and mutant type. Part B (red): 713-base pairs deletion in exon 4 (c.441_1153del713) of MECP2.