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DNA Analysis Dr Tony Fryer Department of Clinical Biochemistry & Centre for Cell and Molecular Medicine North Staffordshire Hospital NHS Trust & University of Keele Overview 1. Background 2. Principles of DNA analysis - Basic principles - Techniques 3. New developments in technology 4. Novel applications - from single gene disorders to high risk patient identification 5.Where is DNA analysis going in the clinical laboratory? 1. Background The current role of DNA-based tests Generally used for:– single gene disorders – small populations (rare diseases individually) – patient diagnosis But this restricted applicability is changing…... Genetics revolution • Increased public awareness • Improvements in technology • Greater understanding of genetic basis of disease – Human genome project • Increased interest from clinicians • More requests for genetic tests 2. Basic Principles of DNA analysis DNA structure • Double-stranded with 'sense' strand running in the opposite direction to the 'antisense' strand. • Strands connected by hydrogen bonding between bases: 5’ A:T (2 bonds) 3’ C:G (3 bonds) • Total number of bases in human sequence = 2.3 x 109 • Approx 50,000 genes. 3’ 5’ Gene structure • Exon • Intron 5’ - encodes mRNA. - between exons. - spliced out during mRNA production. • Promoter - TAATA or Goldberg-Hogness Box. - binding site for RNA polymerase. - site of action of some hormone/receptors. • CAT Box - upstream control element (CCAAT Box). - essential for accurate initiation of transcription. • Enhancers - 5', 3' or intragenic. - Regulate level of expression of genes. • CAP site - Transcription initiation point. - caps mRNA - stabilises & ensures accurate translation. • Poly A site - applies poly A tail to mRNA (stability & transport). Mutation at any of these points can result in aberrant protein synthesis 3’ The Effect of Mutation Normal base sequence:The man had one son and his dog was red but his son had one sad cat. Substitution:The man had one son and his dog was red but his son hid one sad cat. Deletion:The man had one son and hsd ogw asr edb uth iss onh ado nes adc at. Insertion:The man had one son and his dog was red bus yth iss onh ado nes adc at. Nonsense:The man had one son end. Splice site mutations:The man had one wqt oen uts jfi pwx jei jsd pke zso nan dhi sdo gwa sre dbu thi sso nha don esa dca t. Trinucleotide repeats:The man had one son and his dog was red but but but but but but but but but but his son had one sad cat. Hybridisation (a) • Concept central to the understanding of molecular biology. • Relates to the hydrogen bonding between strands of DNA. • Antisense strand = complementary to the sense strand: 5'-CCGGTCATTGCCAAGGT-3' 3'-GGCCAGTAACGGTTCCA-5' • The two strands can be split (denatured) by heat and reanneal (hybridise) spontaneously when the temperature drops below the melting temperature (Tm) Tm depends on:1. Length of DNA sequence 2. Composition (GC:AT ratio) Hybridisation (b) • Under some circumstances (low stringency), non-identical DNA sequences may hybridise:1. At lower temperatures 2. At high salt concentrations • stringency determines specificity. Restriction enzymes • Naturally-occurring enzymes which cut DNA at specific sequences (often palindromic) Examples: • EcoRI (Sticky ends) 5'-GAATTC-3' 5'-G 3'-CTTAAG-5' 3'-CTTAA • SmaI (Blunt ends) 5'-CCCGGG-3' 5'-CCC 3'-GGGCCC-5' 3'-GGG MboI 5'-GATC-3' MstII 5'-CCTNAGG-3' + AATTC-3' G-5' + GGG-3' CCC-5' Southern blotting (a) • Digestion of DNA with restriction enzyme • Separation of fragments by gel electrophoresis • Transfer to a nylon/nitrocellulaose membrane • Detection of sequence of interest by a radio-labeled probe • Autoradiography Southern blotting (b) Mutation detection • Mutation causes loss/gain of restriction site • Fragment sizes altered • Different banding patterns observed (RFLP) Southern blotting (c) Disadvantages • Labour intensive • Expensive • Use of radioactivity • Not amenable to automation • Not suitable for widespread clinical use Polymerase chain reaction (a) • Denaturation ssDNA • Annealing of primers • Amplification • 106 copies of a target sequence No of copies • Repeat 25 cycles No of cycles Cyclin D1 gene Exons: 1 2 3 4 5 3’ 5’ C1722T 159 bp PCR product Hae III restriction site 20 bp 139 bp Banding patterns following HaeIII restriction CC CT TT 159 bp 139 bp Cyclin D1 polymorphism origin 159bp 139bp Genotype CT CT CT CC TT CC TT CT CC CC markers Polymerase chain reaction (b) Advantages • Uses v. small quantities of DNA • Relatively cheap • No requirement for autoradiography • More amenable to automation • Widespread clinical applications Polymerase Chain Reaction The start of a explosion in interest in DNA technology:Single gene disorders are the tip of the iceberg….. Polymerase Chain Reaction ….but what lies beneath the surface? What does the future hold? PCR: the future • Opening the door to new technology • Opening the door to new applications 3. New developments in technology PCR - possibilities for automation Stages in DNA analysis by PCR: • DNA extraction • Thermal cycling • Product detection PCR Automation - DNA Extraction Options: Capital cost Cost/sample Throughput Phenol/Chloroform Alkaline Extraction kit (e.g. Nucleon) Automated system low low £0.30 £0.15 10 samples/h 20 samples/h low high £2 ?£2 20 samples/h 100 samples/h ……but is extraction necessary? PCR Automation - Thermal cycling Scaling down • • • • 0.5ml tubes 0.2ml tubes 96/384 well plates Capillaries (Light cycler) Robotics PCR Automation - Detection Options • Digest+Gel electrophoresis • ARMS • DASH – allele specific labeled probes • Pyrosequencing – mini sequence analysis • WAVE (Temperature Modulated Heteroduplex Analysis) • Real-time PCR (e.g. Light cycler) • Mass Specrometry • Chip technology Amplification Refractory Mutation System (ARMS) - principle mutant Normal DNA Normal DNA normal common common No amplifiction PCR product No PCR product GSTM1 ARMS Assay Exon 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 5’ 3’ 273 bp 132 bp C/G substitution 273 bp 132 bp 110 bp GSTM1 A GSTM1 B GSTM1 AB GSTM1 null GSTM1 ARMS gel Amplification Refractory Mutation System (ARMS) - advantages • No requirement for restriction digestion • Opportunities for multiplex analysis – E.g. Elucigene CF20 kit But….. • Requires more Taq polymerase • Still dependent on gel separation of PCR products Automated gel-free detection systems • Temperature gradient separation – DASH – WAVE • Sequencing – Pyrosequencing Dynamic Allele Specific Hybridisation • PCR • Product immobilization • Single strand isolation • Probe hybridisation • Read fluorescence while heating • Temperature-dependent melting • Analysis & allele scoring Temperature modulated heteroduplex analysis (WAVE) •Useful for screening for unknown mutations •E.g. tumour analysis •More sensitive /automated than SSCP Fragment separation by WAVE The principle of pyrosequencing (a) The principle of pyrosequencing (b) 4. Clinical applications Classical Applications Single Gene Disorders such as: – Cystic Fibrosis – Alpha-1-Antitrypsin Deficiency – Haemochromatosis Molecular diagnostics also applicable to: – Tissue typing – Viral infection Cystic Fibrosis - background • 'Single most common autosomal recessive disorder among Caucasians.' • 1:2500 live births • Defective Gene: - Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) - Chloride Ion Channel - Chromosome 7 - 250,000 base pairs - 27 exons - 1480 amino acids CF: delta-F508 by site-directed mutagenesis of PCR primers Homozygous negative Heterozygous carrier Homozygous positive Heteroduplex fragments 217bp 202bp The delta-F508 mutation results in the loss of a phenyalanine residue at amino acid 508 and accounts for around 80% of CF chromosomes ? Some CF gels in here? Cystic Fibrosis - the classical single gene disorder? • Over 500 mutations in the CFTR now identified • Mutation frequency depends on ethnic origin • Demonstrates significant variation in phenotype: Phenotype-Genotype Correlation Genotype % Pancreatic Insufficiency F508/F508 99 F508/Other 72 Other/Other 36 • But even with the same causative mutation, phenotype differs dramatically • Do genetic factors predispose to severe disease even within single gene disorders? - Modifier genes Future Applications • Pharmacogenetics • Tumour analysis - oncogenes, TSG • Detection of rearrangements - e.g. Philadelphia chromosome • Detection of residual disease • Strain typing • Chromosomal aberrations - FISH • SNP analysis – genetic predisposition to disease – disease severity/prognosis (even in single gene disorders) Renal transplant recipients a growing population • World-wide increase in functioning transplants – improved patient management - longer graft survival – inproved access to transplantation • Number of UK renal allograft recipients: – 11,700 in 1994 – 18,400 in 1999 • Growing population who will develop complications of long term immunosupression Non-melanoma skin cancer a major complication • Increased incidence – 20-fold for basal cell carcinoma (BCC) – 200-fold for squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) • More aggressive behaviour – – – – Present earlier more numerous grow more rapidly metastisise earlier • 5% of recipients will die as a consequence of these maligancies Can we predict which patients will develop skin cancer within 5 years? Will this affect patient management & follow-up? Clinical risk factors • UV – – – – – – – – – Latitude Outdoor occupation Sunbathing habits Cumulative sun exposure Holidays abroad Gender Skin type 1 Blue or green eyes Red/blonde hair color • Immunosuppression – Degree – Regimen – Duration • Other – Smoking (SCC) – Premalignant lesions – Arsenic exposure 1.00 Proportion tumor-free AK negative 0.75 0.50 AK positive 0.25 0.00 0 10 20 30 Time from transplantation to appearance of first NMSC (years) Genetic factors • • • • • UV-induced oxidative stress Melanisation Immune modulation Detoxification of smoking-derived chemicals Cell-cycle control UV Mn-SOD EC-SOD ROS Immunomodulation Lipid and DNA hydroperoxides GSTM1 GSTT1 GSTM3 GSTP1 TNF- IL-10 TGF- IFN- Cyclin D1 Melanisation Tyr MC1R VDR Cell cycle control CYP2D6 Smoking Gene-environment interactions What effect does exposure have on associations of GSTM1 null with skin cancer risk? – GSTM1 null effect most evident in those with: • High UV exposure (p=0.003, OR=11.5) Tumour latency: Gene-Environment interactions Proportion tumor free 1.00 0.75 Other genotype/sunbathing score combinations 0.50 GSTM1 null+sunbathing score>3 0.25 0.00 0 5 10 15 Time post transplantation (years) 20 Targeted surveillance: The predictive index • Use stepwise logistic regression to obtain the best set of predictors for developing NMSC within 5 or 10 years • Generate a predictive index (score) that identifies high risk patients Predictive index (PI) - Australian model PI = (K*1.23)+(A*0.085)+(S*1.47)+(M*0.62)-(G*1.15)-5.88 – – – – – K= Actinic keratoses pre Tx; 1 if any present, 0 if absent A = Age at transplantation S = Skin type; 1 if type 1, 0 if types 2-4 M = Gender; 1 if male, 0 if female G = GSTT1 genotype; 1 if null, 0 if A If the score is -1.4 or greater, the model predicts a squamous cell tumour within 5 years while if the score is less than -1.4, no tumour is predicted. • • • • Accuracy = 78.4% Sensitivity = 82.0% PPV = 46.3% Specificity = 77.5%. NPV = 94.8% odds ratio = 15.7 (95% CI=7.7-31.9), p<0.0001. Predictive index - clinical application These indices can be simplified and applied to clinical management settings to: – identify high risk patients for entry into clinical surveillance programmes – target appropriate treatments – enable focusing of resources – ?amend immunosuppresive dose 5. Where is DNA analysis going in the clinical laboratory? Clinical molecular genetics - the future • Will include very large numbers of patients – every clinical speciality • Includes areas other than just diagnosis – management – monitoring – treatment • Applicable to patients of every age (not just children) Advances in technology will bring DNA analysis to the DGH Molecular genetics - the future Will the new applications provide sufficient workload to warrant establishment of a new Clinical Biochemistry sub-speciality? A few final tips….. 1. Almost all DNA analyses require an EDTA sample. Cytogenetics require heparin. If in doubt, request both! 2. Always ask for a family history and ethnic origin of the patient