Molecular diagnosis of heterogeneous genetic diseases: the example of muscular dystrophies Vincenzo Nigro Dipartimento di Patologia Generale, Seconda Università.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 3 Strachan and Read Chapters 16 & 18
Advertisements

Implications of Consanguinity for Routine Diagnostic Testing and Development of Specialist Services Teresa Lamb Clinical Scientist Leeds DNA Laboratory.
TYPES OF MUTATION CAUSING HUMAN GENETIC DISEASE Nucleotide substitutions (point mutations) Missense mutations Nonsense mutations Spice site mutations Frame.
Module 12 Human DNA Fingerprinting and Population Genetics p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1.
Chromosomes and Inheritance
Vocabulary Review Ch 12 Inheritance Patterns and Human Genetics.
Different classes of mutations – mutation detection Vincenzo Nigro Dipartimento di Patologia Generale, Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli Telethon.
Different classes of mutations – mutation detection
Chapter 14 Sec 1: Genes in Action
Physical Mapping I CIS 667 February 26, Physical Mapping A physical map of a piece of DNA tells us the location of certain markers  A marker is.
SNP Discovery in the Human Genome C244/144 November 21, 2005.
RFLP DNA molecular testing and DNA Typing
Putting it all together: Finding the cystic fibrosis gene Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a genetic disorder that is relatively common in some ethnic groups A.
Human Genetic Mutations
Recombinant DNA Technology Stephen B. Gruber, MD, PhD Division of Molecular Medicine and Genetics November 4, 2002.
Mutations. The picture shows a human genome Karyotype. Look at it carefully and discuss.
Bioinformatics/PCR Lab How does having a certain genetic marker affect chances of getting brain cancer?
Gene Mutations.
Dr Katie Snape Specialist Registrar in Genetics St Georges Hospital
Chapter 14 – The Human Genome
Chapter 3 -- Genetics Diversity Importance of Genetic Diversity Importance of Genetic Diversity -- Maintenance of genetic diversity is a major focus of.
DR. ERNEST K. ADJEI FRCPath. DEPARTMENT OF PATHOLOGY SMS-KATH
Chapter 5 Nucleic Acid Hybridization Assays A. Preparation of nucleic acid probes: 1. Labeling DNA & RNA - Nick Translation - Random primed DNA labeling.
Unit 4 Vocabulary Review. Nucleic Acids Organic molecules that serve as the blueprint for proteins and, through the action of proteins, for all cellular.
Types of Mutations.
Analyzing DNA Differences PHAR 308 March 2009 Dr. Tim Bloom.
DNA Technology Chapter 20.
1. Silent Mutations  Change in nucleotide has no effect on amino acid in protein  Occurs:  Introns  Wobble effect.
Restriction Nucleases Cut at specific recognition sequence Fragments with same cohesive ends can be joined.
Let’s think about it… What are autosomes? What are sex chromosomes?
MUTATION – a CHANGE in the DNA -Affects the production of PROTEINS and gives a new PHENOTYPE.
Investigating the use of Multiple Displacement Amplification (MDA) to amplify nanogram quantities of DNA to use for downstream mutation screening by sequencing.
Dr. Derakhshandeh, PhD Mutation Screening. 2 TYPE OF MUTATIONS WHICH TECHNIQUES DETECT WHAT TYPE OF MUTATIONS In classical genetics, three types of mutations.
1. 2 Methods for detection of un known mutations BRCA.
Module 1 Section 1.3 DNA Technology
Human Genetic Mutations. 2 Main Types of Mutations 1.) Chromosomal Mutations 2.) Gene Mutations.
Chapter 6 PCR and in vitro Mutagenesis A. Basic features of PCR 1. PCR is a cell-free method of DNA cloning standard PCR reaction is a selective DNA amplification.
MUTATIONS & HUMAN GENETICS Chapter 11.3, Chapter 12.
Human Genetics: Patterns of Inheritance for Human Traits.
Tecniche per l’analisi di mutazioni Vincenzo Nigro Dipartimento di Patologia Generale, Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli Telethon Institute of Genetics.
Molecular Testing and Clinical Diagnosis
Human Genetics and the Pedigree. Section Objectives Understand how different mutations occur. Be able to identify different diseases and disorders.
ABC for the AEA Basic biological concepts for genetic epidemiology Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine.
Lecture 6. Functional Genomics: DNA microarrays and re-sequencing individual genomes by hybridization.
Highlights of DNA Technology. Cloning technology has many applications: Many copies of the gene are made Protein products can be produced.
1 Muscular dystrophy Dr. Derakhshandeh. 2 Muscular dystrophy (MD) a group of rare inherited muscle diseases muscle fibers are unusually susceptible to.
Genetic Disorders What is a Genetic Disorder? Caused by abnormalities in an individual’s genetic material (the DNA, or the genome). There are four different.
Chapter 10: Genetic Engineering- A Revolution in Molecular Biology.
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) Nahla Bakhamis. Multiple copies of specific DNA sequences; ‘Molecular Photocopying’
Chapter 3 Genes in Pedigrees Mendelian Pedigree Patterns:
Plant Breeding Shree Krishna Adhikari ©Shree Krishna Adhikari.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Extensions of Mendelian Genetics  Incomplete Dominance is when a heterozygote expresses a phenotype intermediate between.
GENETICS Dr. Samar Saleh Assiss. Lecturer Mosul Medical College Pathology3 rd year.
Human Genetic Mutations. 2 Main Types of Mutations 1.) Chromosomal Mutations 2.) Gene Mutations.
KEY CONCEPT 8.5 Translation converts an mRNA message into a polypeptide, or protein.
Chromosomal Inheritance and Human Heredity. Human Chromosomes Karyotype – a picture of an organism’s chromosomes We take pictures during mitosis when.
Human Genetic Mutations. 2 Main Types of Mutations 1.) Chromosomal Mutations 2.) Gene Mutations.
Name the 4 gene mutations that can occur State the effect of gene mutations on amino acid sequences.
1 Finding disease genes: A challenge for Medicine, Mathematics and Computer Science Andrew Collins, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology and Bioinformatics.
Arun Kumar. B M.Sc 1st Year Biotechnology SSBS
Warm Up Things that are changed in an experiment are called the ___________________.
(4) Genes and proteins in health and disease
Recombinant DNA Technology
STEVE S. SOMMER, M.D., Ph.D.  Mayo Clinic Proceedings 
Different mode and types of inheritance
Human Genetic Mutations
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
What is a mutation? Mutation = any change in DNA (the order of nucleotide bases/letters) Can occur in any cell in the body. Remember from the cells unit.
Spinal Muscular Atrophy
Dr. Mamoun Ahram Biochemistry for Nursing First semester
Presentation transcript:

Molecular diagnosis of heterogeneous genetic diseases: the example of muscular dystrophies Vincenzo Nigro Dipartimento di Patologia Generale, Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli Telethon Institute of Genetics and Medicine (TIGEM)

What is a mutation? A variation of the DNA sequence that is only found in affected individuals that is only found in affected individuals that is never found in non affected individuals that is never found in non affected individuals that accounts for the pathological process/status that accounts for the pathological process/status that, when corrected in time, disease is rescued that, when corrected in time, disease is rescued

..that is only found in affected and that is never found in non affected incomplete penetrance that is more often found in affected than in non affected...

private variants = innocuous differences belonging to one family CCCCAGCCTCCTTGCCAACGCCCCCTTTCCCTCTCCCCCTCCCGCTCGGCGCTGACC CCCCATCCCCACCCCCGTGGGAACACTGGGAGCCTGCACTCCACAGACCCTCTCCTT GCCTCTTCCCTCACCTCAGCCTCCGCTCCCCGCCCTCTTCCCGGCCCAGGGCGCCG GCCCACCCTTCCCTCCGCCGCCCCCCGGCCGCGGGGAGGACATGGCCGCGCACAG GCCGGTGGAATGGGTCCAGGCCGTGGTCAGCCGCTTCGACGAGCAGCTTCCAATAA AAACAGGACAGCAGAACACACATACCAAAGTCAGTACTGAGCACAACAAGGAATGTC TAATCAATATTTCCAAATACAAGTTTTCTTTGGTTATAAGCGGCCTCACTACTATTTTAA AGAATGTTAACAATATGAGAATATTTGGAGAAGCTGCTGAAAAAAATTTATATCTCTCT CAGTTGATTATATTGGATACACTGGAAAAATGTCTTGCTGGGCAACCAAAGGACACAA TGAGATTAGATGAAACGATGCTGGTCAAACAGTTGCTGCCAGAAATCTGCCATTTTCT TCACACCTGTCGTGAAGGAAACCAGCATGCAGCTGAACTTCGGAATTCTGCCTCTGG GGTTTTATTTTCTCTCAGCTGCAACAACTTCAATGCAGTCTTTAGTCGCATTTCTACCA GGTTACAGGAATTAACTGTTTGTTCAGAAGACAATGTTGATGTTCATGATATAGAATTG TTACAGTATATCAATGTGGATTGTGCAAAATTAAAACGACTCCTGAAGGAAACAGCAT TTAAATTTAAAGCCCTAAAGAAGGTTGCGCAGTTAGCAGTTATAAATAGCCTGGAAAA GGCATTTTGGAACTGGGTAGAAAATTATCCAGATGAATTTACAAAACTGTACCAGATC CCACAGACTGATATGGCTGAATGTGCAGAAAAGCTATTTGACTTGGTGGATGGTTTTG CTGAAAGCACCAAACGTAAAGCAGCAGTTTGGCCACTACAAATCATTCTCCTTATCTT GTGTCCAGAAATAATCCAGGATATATCCAAAGACGTGGTTGATGAAAACAACATGAAT AAGAAGTTATTTCTGGACAGTCTACGAAAAGCTCTTGCTGGCCATGGAGGAAGTAGG CAGCTGACAGAAAGTGCTGCAATTGCCTGTGTCAAACTGTGTAAAGCAAGTACTTACA TCAATTGGGAAGATAACTCTGTCATTTTCCTACTTGTTCAGTCCATGGTGGTTGATCTT AAGAACCTGCTTTTTAATCCAAGTAAGCCATTCTCAAGAGGCAGTCAGCCTGCAGATG TGGATCTAATGATTGACTGCCTTGTTTCTTGCTTTCGTATAAGCCCTCACAACAACCAA CACTTTAAGATCTGCCTGGCTCAGAATTCACCTTCTACATTTCACTATGTGCTGGTAAA TTCACTCCATCGAATCATCACCAATTCCGCATTGGATTGGTGGCCTAAGATTGATGCT GTGTATTGTCACTCGGTTGAACTTCGAAATATGTTTGGTGAAACACTTCATAAAGCAG TGCAAGGTTGTGGAGCACACCCAGCAATACGAATGGCACCGAGTCTTACATTTAAAG AAAAAGTAACAAGCCTTAAATTTAAAGAAAAACCTACAGACCTGGAGACAAGAAGCTA TAAGTATCTTCTCTTGTCCATGGTGAAACTAATTCATGCAGATCCAAAGCTCTTGCTTT GTAATCCAAGAAAACAGGGGCCCGAAACCCAAGGCAGTACAGCAGAATTAATTACAG GGCTCGTCCAACTGGTCCCTCAGTCACACATGCCAGAGATTGCTCAGGAAGCAATGG AGGCTCTGCTGGTTCTTCATCAGTTAGATAGCATTGATTTGTGGAATCCTGATGCTCC TGTAGAAACATTTTGGGAGATTAGCTCACAAATGCTTTTTTACATCTGCAAGAAATTAA CTAGTCATCAAATGCTTAGTAGCACAGAAATTCTCAAGTGGTTGCGGGAAATATTGAT CTGCAGGAATAAATTTCTTCTTAAAAATAAGCAGGCAGATAGAAGTTCCTGTCACTTTC CCCCAGCCTCCTTGCCAACGCCCCCTTTCCCTCTCCCCCTCCCGCTCGGCGCTGACC CCCCATCCCCACCCCCGTGGGAACACTGGGAGCCTGCACTCCACAGACCCTCTCCTT GCCTCTTCCCTCACCTCAGCCTCCGCTCCCCGCCCTCTTCCCGGCCCAGGGCGCCG GCCCACCCTTCCCTCCGCCGCCCCCCGGCCGCGGGGAGGACATGGCCGCGCACAG GCCGGTGGAATGGGTCCAGGCCGTGGTCAGCCGCTTCGACGAGCAGCTTCCAATAA AAACAGGACAGCAGAACACACATACCAAAGTCAGTACTGAGCACAACAAGGAATGTC TAATCAATATTTCCAAATACAAGTTTTCTTTGGTTATAAGCGGCCTCACTACTATTTTAA AGAATGTTAACTATATGAGAATATTTGGAGAAGCTGCTGAAAAAAATTTATATCTCTCT CAGTTGATTATATTGGATACACTGGAAAAATGTCTTGCTGGGCAACCAAAGGACACAA TGAGATTAGATGAAACGATGCTGGTCAAACAGTTGCTGCCAGAAATCTGCCATTTTCT TCACACCTGTCGTGAAGGAAACCAGCATGCAGCTGAACTTCGGAATTCTGCCTCTGG GGTTTTATTTTCTCTCAGCTGCAACAACTTCAATGCAGTCTTTAGTCGCATTTCTACCA GGTTACAGGAATTAACTGTTTGTTCAGAAGACAATGTTGATGTTCATGATATAGAATTG TTACAGTATATCAATGTGGATTGTGCAAAATTAAAACGACTCCTGAAGGAAACAGCAT TTAAATTTAAAGCCCTAAAGAAGGTTGCGCAGTTAGCAGTTATAAATAGCCTGGAAAA GGCATTTTGGAACTGGGTAGAAAATTATCCAGATGAATTTACAAAACTGTACCAGATC CCACAGACTGATATGGCTGAATGTGCAGAAAAGCTATTTGACTTGGTGGATGGTTTTG CTGAAAGCACCAAACGTAAAGCAGCAGTTTGGCCACTACAAATCATTCTCCTTATCTT GTGTCCAGAAATAATCCAGGATATATCCAAAGACGTGGTTGATGAAAACAACATGAAT AAGAAGTTATTTCTGGACAGTCTACGAAAAGCTCTTGCTGGCCATGGAGGAAGTAGG CAGCTGACAGAAAGTGCTGCAATTGCCTGTGTCAAACTGTGTAAAGCAAGTACTTACA TCAATTGGGAAGATAACTCTGTCATTTTCCTACTTGTTCAGTCCATGGTGGTTGATCTT AAGAACCTGCTTTTTAATCCAAGTAAGCCATTCTCAAGAGGCAGTCAGCCTGCAGATG TGGATCTAATGATTGACTGCCTTGTTTCTTGCTTTCGTATAAGCCCTCACAACAACCAA CACTTTAAGATCTGCCTGGCTCAGAATTCACCTTCTACATTTCACTATGTGCTGGTAAA TTCACTCCATCGAATCATCACCAATTCCGCATTGGATTGGTGGCCTAAGATTGATGCT GTGTATTGTCACTCGGTTGAACTTCGAAATATGTTTGGTGAAACACTTCATAAAGCAG TGCAAGGTTGTGGAGCACACCCAGCAATACGAATGGCACCGAGTCTTACATTTAAAG AAAAAGTAACAAGCCTTAAATTTAAAGAAAAACCTACAGACCTGGAGACAAGAAGCTA TAAGTATCTTCTCTTGTCCATGGTGAAACTAATTCATGCAGCTCCAAAGCTCTTGCTTT GTAATCCAAGAAAACAGGGGCCCGAAACCCAAGGCAGTACAGCAGAATTAATTACAG GGCTCGTCCAACTGGTCCCTCAGTCACACATGCCAGAGATTGCTCAGGAAGCAATGG AGGCTCTGCTGGTTCTTCATCAGTTAGATAGCATTGATTTGTGGAATCCTGATGCTCC TGTAGAAACATTTTGGGAGATTAGCTCACAAATGCTTTTTTACATCTGCAAGAAATTAA CTAGTCATCAAATGCTTAGTAGCACAGAAATTCTCAAGTGGTTGCGGGAAATATTGAT CTGCAGGAATAAATTTCTTCTTAAAAATAAGCAGGCAGATAGAAGTTCCTGTCACTTTC

1-allele diseases monoallelic mutations may be responsible for dominant or X-linked disorders monoallelic mutations may be responsible for dominant or X-linked disorders new random mutations are the rule with an unpredictable pattern of distribution new random mutations are the rule with an unpredictable pattern of distribution

Gender effect in mutations For mutations other than point mutations, sex biases in the mutation rate are very variable For mutations other than point mutations, sex biases in the mutation rate are very variable Small deletions are more frequent in females Small deletions are more frequent in females Germline base substitution mutations occur more frequently in males than in females, especially in older males Germline base substitution mutations occur more frequently in males than in females, especially in older males Point mutations at some loci occur almost exclusively in males, whereas others occur ten times more than in females Point mutations at some loci occur almost exclusively in males, whereas others occur ten times more than in females

Relative frequency of de novo achondroplasia for different paternal ages

Relative frequency of de novo neurofibromatosis for different paternal ages Relative frequency of de novo neurofibromatosis for different paternal ages

the number of male germ-cell divisions

2-allele diseases novel mutations are rare, usually mutations have a long history ( generations) novel mutations are rare, usually mutations have a long history ( generations) mutations have an ethnical signature with a predictable pattern of distribution and frequency mutations have an ethnical signature with a predictable pattern of distribution and frequency biallelic mutations may be responsible for autosomal recessive disorders biallelic mutations may be responsible for autosomal recessive disorders polymorphisms and private variants are more easily discriminated vs true mutations polymorphisms and private variants are more easily discriminated vs true mutations

2-allele diseases consanguineity is a risk factor for homozygosity consanguineity is a risk factor for homozygosity high carrier frequency is a risk factor for compound heterozygosity high carrier frequency is a risk factor for compound heterozygosity

The effect of an allele null or amorph = no product null or amorph = no product hypomorph = reduced amount / activity hypomorph = reduced amount / activity hypermorph = increased amount / activity hypermorph = increased amount / activity neomorph = novel product / activity neomorph = novel product / activity antimorph = antagonistic product / activity antimorph = antagonistic product / activity

Dominant or recessive phenotype?

Loss of function mutations in the PAX3 gene (Waardenburg syndrome) haploinsufficiency

amorph / hypomorph (1) deletion deletion –the entire gene –part of the gene disruption of the gene structure disruption of the gene structure –by insertion, inversion, translocation promoter inactivation promoter inactivation mRNA destabilization mRNA destabilization splicing mutation splicing mutation –inactivating donor/acceptor –activating criptic splice sites

amorph / hypomorph (2) frame-shift in translation frame-shift in translation –by insertion of n+1 or n+2 bases into the coding sequence –by deletion of n+1 or n+2 bases into the coding sequence nonsense mutation nonsense mutation missense mutation / aa deletion missense mutation / aa deletion –essential / conserved amino acid –defect in post-transcriptional processing –defect in cellular localization

hypermorph trisomia trisomia duplication duplication amplification (cancer) amplification (cancer) chromatin derepression (FSH) chromatin derepression (FSH) trasposition under a strong promoter trasposition under a strong promoter –leukemia overactivity of an abnormal protein overactivity of an abnormal protein

neomorph generation of chimeric proteins generation of chimeric proteins duplication duplication amplification (cancer) amplification (cancer) missense mutations missense mutations inclusion of coding cryptic exons inclusion of coding cryptic exons usage of alternative ORFs usage of alternative ORFs overactivity of an abnormal protein overactivity of an abnormal protein

antimorph missense mutations missense mutations inclusion of coding cryptic exons inclusion of coding cryptic exons usage of alternative ORFs usage of alternative ORFs

Mutation detection mutation scanning mutation scanning –or resequencing methods for identifying previously unknown mutations genotyping genotyping –methods for scoring previously known mutations or single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)

Key questions for mutation detection strategy expected mutations are monoallelic or biallelic? is the gene well recognized for that disease? is the mutation pattern known? (deletion, dup, small mutations, etc.) which is the complexity of the gene? how many patients must be examined? how many controls should be examined? how many mutations and how many variations have already been identified in this gene? are there more members of the same gene family (or pseudogenes) in the genome?

Gene size Number of patients X Number of controls Dimension of the mutation detection study

frequent mutations are known? mutationscanning SEQUENCING screening of recurrent mutations mutations YES NO mutations are identified? YES NO General strategy for mutation detection

DMD Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy - 1/3,500 boys Onset -- Early childhood - about 2 to 6 years DMD Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy - 1/3,500 boys Onset -- Early childhood - about 2 to 6 years –Laboratory -- CK (50x to 1.000x), LDH5, ALT, AST, aldolase increase Symptoms -- Generalized weakness and muscle wasting affecting proximal limb muscles first. Calves often enlarged. Heart involvement Progression -- Disease progresses slowly but will affect all voluntary muscles. Survival possible beyond late twenties BMD Becker Muscular Dystrophy - 1/10,000 boys Onset -- Adolescence or adulthood Symptoms -- Almost identical to Duchenne but often much less severe. Heart involvement Progression -- Slower and more variable than DMD with survival well into mid to late adulthood BMD Becker Muscular Dystrophy - 1/10,000 boys Onset -- Adolescence or adulthood Symptoms -- Almost identical to Duchenne but often much less severe. Heart involvement Progression -- Slower and more variable than DMD with survival well into mid to late adulthood

Carrier of a balanced reciprocal X-autosome translocation

Dystrophin gene: page 1/185

Dystrophin gene: page 2/185

Dystrophin gene: page 3/185

Dystrophin gene: page 185/185

more DNA Telethon-UILDM 250/300 DMD/BMD Qualitative test Quantitative test rejected 80plex-PCR Deletions duplications Point mutations mRNA study Family tests

DMD AB BMD C D DMD patient : groups A, B BMD patient : groups C, D Deletion ex Duplication ex Log-PCR = 4 multiplex-PCR (2x20+2x18) with uniform spacing and gel position according to chromosomal position : del ex 43 2: del ex 11, 17, 19, 21 3: del ex 17, 19, 21 4: del ex 50, 52 5: del ex 7, 11, 17, 19 6: del ex 61 1: no del 2: del ex 8, 12, 18, 20, 22 3: del ex 12, 18, 20, 22 4: del ex 46, 51 5: del ex 6, 8, 12, 18 6: del ex 62

large deletions in 377/506 DMD/BMD 74.5%

large duplications in 51/506 patients 10.1%

SALSA MLPA probes

Hybridysation The MLPA probemix is added to denatured genomic DNA The two parts of each probe hybridise to adjacent target sequences

Ligation 3. Probes are ligated by a thermostable ligase

PCR amplification 4. A universal primer pair is used to amplify all ligated probes The PCR product of each probe has a unique length ( bp)

Separation and quantification by capillary electrophoresis Each peak is the amplification product of a specific probe. Samples are compared to a control sample. A difference in relative peak height or peak area indicates a copy number change of the probe target sequence

MRC-Holland b.v. Triple X Female Male 283 bp 346 bp Detection of Chr X copy number X

MLPA discriminates sequences that differ in only a single nucleotide and can be used to detect known mutations. MismatchPerfect match Ligation of the two probe oligonucleotides  Amplification product Mismatch at the probe ligation site  No ligation, no amplification product

MRC-Holland b.v. Unmethylated Target M M Methylated Target Denaturation and Multiplex probe hybridization M Only undigested (methylated) and ligated probes are exponentially amplified Ligation and Digestion with methylation sensitive endonucleases M MS-MLPA

Limb-girdle weakness proximal weakness: most common Lower extremities Lower extremities –difficulty climbing stairs –arising from a low chair or toilet –getting up from a squatted position Upper extremities Upper extremities –trouble lifting objects over their head –brushing their hair distal weakness distal weakness –difficulty opening jars, inability to turn a key in the ignition, or tripping due to foot drop cranial weakness cranial weakness –dysarthria, dysphagia or ptosis

Genetics of limb-girdle muscular dystrophies autosomal dominant autosomal dominant LGMD1A5q31.2myotilin (Hauser, 2000) LGMD1A5q31.2myotilin (Hauser, 2000) LGMD1B1q21lamin A/C (Bonne, 1999) LGMD1B1q21lamin A/C (Bonne, 1999) LGMD1C3p25.3caveolin 3 (Minetti, 1997) LGMD1C3p25.3caveolin 3 (Minetti, 1997) LGMD1D6q22 ? LGMD1D6q22 ? LGMD1E7q35 ? LGMD1E7q35 ? LGMD1F7q31.1filamin C LGMD1F7q31.1filamin C LGMD1G4p21? LGMD1G4p21? autosomal recessive autosomal recessive LGMD2A15q15calpain 3 (Richard, 1995) LGMD2A15q15calpain 3 (Richard, 1995) LGMD2B2p13.2dysferlin (Bashir, Liu, 1998) LGMD2B2p13.2dysferlin (Bashir, Liu, 1998) LGMD2C13q12  -sarcoglycan (Noguchi, 1995) LGMD2C13q12  -sarcoglycan (Noguchi, 1995) LGMD2D17q21.33  -sarcoglycan (Roberds, 1994) LGMD2D17q21.33  -sarcoglycan (Roberds, 1994) LGMD2E4q12  -sarcoglycan (Bonnemann, Lim, 1995) LGMD2E4q12  -sarcoglycan (Bonnemann, Lim, 1995) LGMD2F5q33  -sarcoglycan (Nigro, 1996) LGMD2F5q33  -sarcoglycan (Nigro, 1996) LGMD2G17q12telethonin (Moreira, 2000) LGMD2G17q12telethonin (Moreira, 2000) LGMD2H9q33.1TRIM 32 (Frosk, 2002) LGMD2H9q33.1TRIM 32 (Frosk, 2002) LGMD2I19q13.3FKRP (Brockington, 2001) LGMD2I19q13.3FKRP (Brockington, 2001) LGMD2J2q24.3titin (Udd, 2002) LGMD2J2q24.3titin (Udd, 2002) LGMD2K9q34.1POMT1 (Balci, 2005) LGMD2K9q34.1POMT1 (Balci, 2005) LGMD2L9q31fukutin (Godfrey, 2006) LGMD2L9q31fukutin (Godfrey, 2006) LGMD2M11p13-p12? LGMD2M11p13-p12?

autosomal dominant forms (LGMD1) are generally milder autosomal dominant forms (LGMD1) are generally milder represent less than 10% of all LGMD represent less than 10% of all LGMD marked heterogeneity for LGMD1, one gene per one single family marked heterogeneity for LGMD1, one gene per one single family autosomal dominant

autosomal recessive autosomal recessive forms (LGMD2) have an average prevalence of 1:14,000-1:20,000 at birth autosomal recessive forms (LGMD2) have an average prevalence of 1:14,000-1:20,000 at birth frequency differences among countries frequency differences among countries this depends on higher carrier frequencies of single mutations, as 550delA for calpain 3 in Croatia, L276I for FKRP in Northern Europe, 521delT for gamma-sarcoglycan in Northern Africa this depends on higher carrier frequencies of single mutations, as 550delA for calpain 3 in Croatia, L276I for FKRP in Northern Europe, 521delT for gamma-sarcoglycan in Northern Africa At least 25% of families are excluded from any known locus and 40% of typical LGMD cases have no mutation in any known gene At least 25% of families are excluded from any known locus and 40% of typical LGMD cases have no mutation in any known gene

Tools to address the diagnosis of LGMD Clinical presentation (MRI) Clinical presentation (MRI) WB analysis WB analysis Segregation study Segregation study Mutation detection in patients Mutation detection in patients Mutation detection in normal subjects Mutation detection in normal subjects Homogeneous collection of mutations and polymorphisms Homogeneous collection of mutations and polymorphisms

Segregation analysis Analysis of 30 polymorphic markers linked to LGMD2A, 2B, 2C-2F, 2I in sib pairs Analysis of 30 polymorphic markers linked to LGMD2A, 2B, 2C-2F, 2I in sib pairs To find homozigosity… To find homozigosity…

Calpain 3 24 exons dysferlin 55 exons  -sarcoglycan 8 ex (10) FKRP 4 esons (8) Telethonin 2 exons (3) TRIM32 1 exons (7) Titin 363 ex (35)  -sarcoglycan 10 exons  -sarcoglycan 6 ex (7)  -sarcoglyican 9 exons Myotilin 9 exons Lamin A/C 13 exons Caveolin 3 2 exons (3)

Case 1 The gene is known The gene is known It is composed of five small size exons It is composed of five small size exons There are 10 patients, sons of consanguineous parents There are 10 patients, sons of consanguineous parents Expected mutations are homozygous Expected mutations are homozygous Mutations have never been identified in this gene Mutations have never been identified in this gene There is no other member of the same gene families (or pseudogenes) in the genome There is no other member of the same gene families (or pseudogenes) in the genome

Case 2 The gene is known The gene is known The putative function of the gene product is to serve as a transcription factor The putative function of the gene product is to serve as a transcription factor Expected mutations are dominant Expected mutations are dominant Mutations have never been identified in this gene Mutations have never been identified in this gene There are other members of the same gene families (or pseudogenes) in the genome There are other members of the same gene families (or pseudogenes) in the genome

Sequencing With the ongoing reduction of costs (today about 2-4 €/run), sequencing of PCR products is applied for mutation detection With the ongoing reduction of costs (today about 2-4 €/run), sequencing of PCR products is applied for mutation detection Sequencing is often thought of as the 'gold standard' for mutation detection. Sequencing is often thought of as the 'gold standard' for mutation detection. This perception is distorted due to the fact that this is the only method of mutation identification, but this does not mean it is the best for mutation detection This perception is distorted due to the fact that this is the only method of mutation identification, but this does not mean it is the best for mutation detection

Sequencing artifacts FALSE POSITIVE (specificity) –when searching for heterozygous DNA differences there are a number of potential mutations, together with sequence artifacts, compressions and differences in peak intensities that must be re- checked with additional primers and costs FALSE NEGATIVE (sensitivity) –loss of information farther away or closer to the primer –does not detect a minority of mutant molecules in a wild-type environment

Current mutation scanning techniques SSCP (single strand conformation polymorphism) SSCP (single strand conformation polymorphism) HA (heteroduplex analysis) HA (heteroduplex analysis) CCM (chemical cleavage of mismatch) CCM (chemical cleavage of mismatch) CSGE (conformation sensitive gel electrophoresis) CSGE (conformation sensitive gel electrophoresis) DGGE (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis) DGGE (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis) DHPLC (denaturing HPLC) DHPLC (denaturing HPLC) PTT (protein truncation test) PTT (protein truncation test) DGCE (denaturing gradient capillary electrophoresis) DGCE (denaturing gradient capillary electrophoresis) direct sequencing direct sequencing

SSCP

Mutation detection by heteroduplex analysis: the mutant DNA must first be hybridized with the wild-type DNA to form a mixture of two homoduplexes and two heteroduplexes

Heteroduplex analysis

DHPLC denaturing HPLC from Transgenomic

DHPLC analysis at different temperatures of the column

Analysis of dystrophin exon 59 Homoduplex DNA: PCR fragments are identicals Heteroduplex DNA: PCR fragments are different

DHPLC analysis of the CAPN3 gene (exon 11) UV 02 FLUO :21:41:61:81:10

POOLED PLATES A+B PLATE A PLATE B DHPLC analysis

PTT protein truncation test Sensitivity 1000-bp fragment > 85% Sensitivity 1000-bp fragment > 85% Detects only nonsense mutations Detects only nonsense mutations Post PCR time: hours (translation/trascription, gel preparation, loading and run, analysis of results) Post PCR time: hours (translation/trascription, gel preparation, loading and run, analysis of results) Use of 35S radioactivity Use of 35S radioactivity No special equipment required No special equipment required mRNA as starting template mRNA as starting template

Applications of PTT (% of truncating mutations) Polycystic Kidney Disease PKD1 95% Polycystic Kidney Disease PKD1 95% Familial Adenomatous Polyposis APC 95% Familial Adenomatous Polyposis APC 95% Ataxia telangiectasia ATM 90% Ataxia telangiectasia ATM 90% Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer BRCA1-290% Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer BRCA1-290% Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy DMD 90%? Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy DMD 90%? Fanconi anemia FAA80% Fanconi anemia FAA80% Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer hMSH1-2 70%- 80% Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer hMSH1-2 70%- 80% Neurofibromatosis type 2 NF2 65% Neurofibromatosis type 2 NF2 65% Hunter Syndrome IDS50% Hunter Syndrome IDS50% Neurofibromatosis type 1 NF1 50% Neurofibromatosis type 1 NF1 50% Cystic Fibrosis CFTR15% Cystic Fibrosis CFTR15%

Molecular inversion probe (MIP) genotyping MIP genotyping uses circularizable probes with 5′ and 3′ ends that anneal upstream and downstream of the SNP site leaving a 1 bp gap Polymerase extension with dNTPs and a non-strand- displacing polymerase is used to fill in the gap

Ligation seals the nick, and exonuclease I is used to remove excess unannealed and unligated circular probes The resultant product is PCR-amplified and the orientation of the primers ensures that only circularized probes will be amplified The resultant product is hybridized and read out on an array of universal-capture probes

GoldenGate uses extension ligation between annealed locus-specific oligos (LSOs) and allele- specific oligos (ASOs) An allele-specific primer extension step is used to preferentially extend the correctly matched ASO (at the 3′ end) up to the 5′ end of the LSO primer Ligation then closes the nick GoldenGate genotyping assay

A subsequent PCR amplification step is used to amplify the appropriate product using common primers to ‘built-in’ universal PCR sites in the ASO and LSO sequences A subsequent PCR amplification step is used to amplify the appropriate product using common primers to ‘built-in’ universal PCR sites in the ASO and LSO sequences The resultant PCR products are hybridized and read out on an array of universal-capture probes The resultant PCR products are hybridized and read out on an array of universal-capture probes GoldenGate genotyping assay

454 technology: DNA fragmentation and adaptor ligation

454 technology: a water-in-oil emulsion is created: a single molecule of DNA with a single bead

454 technology: Beads with clones are selected and assembled onto a planar substrate

454 technology: Sequencing by synthesis pyrosequencing Up to 100 Million bp in 8 hours can be read Ambiguities arise for homopolymeric tracts

7.4 x coverage 234 runs 24.5 billions bp

11 genetic diseases !!

NimbleGen sequence capture