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Mutation Screening Dr. Derakhshandeh, PhD TYPE OF MUTATIONS WHICH TECHNIQUES DETECT WHAT TYPE OF MUTATIONS In classical genetics, three types of mutations are distinguished: 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 2 Different types of mutations genome mutations: changes in chromosome number chromosome mutations: changes in chromosome structure gene or point mutations: mutations where changes are at molecular level 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 3 genome mutations: changes in chromosome number 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 4 Examples (genome mutations) Trinomials eg Trisomy 21 Monosomies eg Monosomy 14, 16 Sex Chromosome number changes eg 47, XXY haploidy, triploidy eg in leukemias, abnormal fetuses 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 5 Techniques Karyotyping, conventional cytogenetics 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 6 Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21( 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD Trisomy 2( 7 Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21( 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 8 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 9 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 10 Trisomy 18, 47 Ch 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 11 Kleinefelter/47/XXY 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 12 Kleinefelter XXY 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 13 chromosome mutations: changes in chromosome structure 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 14 CHANGES IN CHROMOSOME STRUCTURE Translocations Large Deletions/Insertions Inversions Duplications/Amplifications 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 15 Techniques Conventional cytogenetics molecular cytogenetics FISH Molecular: PFGE, Southern blotting, Northern Blotting Fluorescence Dosage analysis 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 16 Interphase FISH Examples 13 (green), and 21 (red) 11:21 AM 18 (aqua), X (green), and Y (red). Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 17 female fetus with trisomy-21 • chromosomes 13 (green), and 21 (red) 11:21 AM • chromosomes 18 (aqua), X (green), and Y (red). Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 18 DiGeorge/Velo-Cardio-Facial/CATCH 22/Shprintzen Syndrome which is caused by a microdeletion on chromosome 22 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 19 "painting" probe for chromosome 4 which causes the entire chromosome to fluoresce. One chromosome 4 from this individual was abnormal but it was difficult to determine from routine Cytogenetics if it had a small terminal deletion at 4q or was the result of a more complex rearrangement 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 20 the same individual as the cell above has been hybridized with a probe for the terminal part of chromosome 4q. Since there is only one green signal this confirms that one chromosome 4 is missing material from the terminal end of 4q. 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 21 probe for Steroid Sulfatase Deficiency which is caused by a microdeletion on the X chromosome. The "Xp22.3" probe signal is located at the Steroid Sulfatase region at Xp22.3. Since there are two X chromosomes and only one has the Steroid Sulfatase gene signal 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD . 22 Functional consequences: depend on the extent and location of change and the particular genes involved 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 23 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 24 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 25 gene or point mutations: mutations where changes are at molecular level 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 26 Methods for detection of known mutations Methods for detection of unknown mutations 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 27 Methods for detection of known mutations PCR and size separation eg. DMD PCR and restriction enzyme digestion eg. SMN exon 7 &8 Allele specific amplification (ASA) Allele refactory mutation system (ARMS) eg. CF Allele specific oligonucleotide hybridisation (ASO) Dot Blot eg. CF DNA chips eg. Brca1 Genomic DNA sequencing 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 28 ARMS Amplification Refractory Mutation System Allele Specific PCR (ASPCR) PCR Amplification of Specific Alleles (PASA) 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 29 ARMS Two complementary reactions one contains a primer specific for the normal allele the other contains one for the mutant allele both have a common primer one PCR primer perfectly matches one allelic variant of the target but is mismatched to the other mismatch is located at/near 3' end of primer 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 30 ARMS genotyping is based on: whether there is amplification in one or both reactions band in normal reaction: only indicates normal allele band in mutant reaction: only indicates mutant allele bands in both reactions indicate a heterozygote 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 31 Uses Population screening rapid (1 working day) inexpensive non-isotopic Used for testing for B-thalassaemia Cystic Fibrosis alpha-1-antitrysin sickle-cell anaemia Phenylketonuria Apolipoprotein E, etc 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 32 Protocol f. ARMS Primers- "Wallace temperature" ie [(A +T)x2oC + (G + C)x4 oC] of 48-50 oC- GC should not have self complementary seqs of 4bp or more Amplification- (94 oC 1min, 50 oC 2min, 72 oC 3min)x3025ul reaction: 250ng genomic DNA 10mM Tris-HCl pH 8.3 50mM KCl 200uM each dNTP 0.5 U Taq Pol 0.05-1uM of each oligonucleotide 1.5-4.5 mM MgCl2 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 33 Optimization of ARMS Magnesium titration (1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 4.5mM) oligo titration (1.0, 0.25, 0.1, 0.05uM) adjust MgCl2 & oligo: to give spurious bands that do not interfere with specific detection but act as an internal control for successful PCR in absence of the specific band 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 34 Other Optimization Tips • decreasing oligo conc to 0.05uM may increase specificity (but < 0.025uM may give weak signal) - MgCl2 conc can be lowered below 1.5mM to achieve specificity - Adding EDTA can decrease the effectively MgCl2 - MgCl2 conc >4.5mM can give useful spurious bands as internal controls - Dilution of template DNA to improve specificity & avoid problems of contaminating PCR inhibitors 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 35 Modifications/Adaptions to the original ARMS methodology Multiplex ARMS 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 36 Multiplex ARMS Many genetic diseases have more than one mutation often closely spaced eg CF (over 900 mutations) now known - majority are rare but some a relatively common eg F508, G551D 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 37 To set up multiplex ARMS Determine commonest mutations in the respective population develop the muliplex ARMS for the commonest mutations validate the results of the multiplex test on samples with known mutations determined via another methology 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 38 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 39 Agarose gels showing the feasibility of the ARMS concept 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 40 Thalassemia Minor 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 41 Thalassemia Onset: Childhood Hypo chromic / Microcrystal anemia Low level of MCV / MCH -Thal: Elevated HbA2 (α22) HbF (α2γ2) α-Thal: Normal HbA2, HbF Thalassemia Minor • Thalassemia minor is an inherited form of hemolytic anemia that is less severe than thalassemia major. • This blood smear from an individual with thalassemia shows small (microcytic), pale (hypochromic), variously-shaped (poikilocytosis) red blood cells. • These small red blood cells (RBCs) are able to carry less oxygen than normal RBCs . 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 43 Thalassemia Major 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 44 Thalassemia major an inherited form of hemolytic anemia characterized by red blood cell (hemoglobin) production abnormalities. the most severe form of anemia the oxygen depletion in the body becomes apparent within the first 6 months of life. 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 45 untreated death usually results within a few years. Note the small, pale (hypochromic), abnormally-shaped red blood cells associated with thalassemia major. 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 46 globin mutations RNA-Processing (º) Splice junction IVSI-1 IVSI-2 IVSI-3’ end del 25bp IvsI-130 Consensus splice sites (º/ +) IVSI-5 IVSI-6 IVSII-844 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 47 globin mutations Cryptic splice sites in Introns (+) IVSI-110 IVSII-745 Cryptic splice sites in exons Cd 26 (HbE) Cd 121 (HbD panjab/O Arab) 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 48 Prenatal diagnosis I. ARMS-PCR (22 common mut.) II. PCR-RFLP (9 inf. RFLPs) III. RDB (60 mut.) IV. Sequencing 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 49 ARMS-PCR 1 N 11:21 AM 2 M 3 N 4 M 5 N 6 M 7 N Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 8 M 9 N 10 M 11 N 12 M 50 PCR-RFLP 1 2 UD -/+ 11:21 AM 3 M 4 -/- LSV UD Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 5 +/+ 6 7 +/+ -/- 51 Sickle Cell disorder 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 52 Sickle Cell disorder Stuck the red cell in the vessels In children: Spleen, chest, wrists,ankles In adults: hips and shoulders Anemia (Hb 7-8 g/dl) Infections (take antibiotics) Painful crises (6-18 months) Swollen and inflamed (hand/food syndrome) 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 53 Methods for detection of unknown mutations 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 54 detection of unknown mutations Small Mutations 11:21 AM Physical methods Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) eg. DMD, Thal Single stranded conformation polymorphism analysis (SSCP) Heteroduplex analysis (HA) Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 55 Methods for unknown mutations (diagnostic methods) These methods are relatively simple, but still require: experience and skill to perform. 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 56 DGGE Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 57 DGGE is often used in diagnostic laboratories non-radioactive tracers and detects almost all mutations 11:21 AM Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD 58