Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1971458 Clinical Biochemistry 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesHigh-resolution melting analysis has been validated for screening several genes of clinical significance. We evaluated whether it would be useful for detecting mutations in the LDL receptor gene (LDLR).Design and methodsWe analysed 60 samples heterozygous for different LDLR sequence variants, and compared the melting curves to those of the corresponding homozygous normal amplicons to assess whether they would be detected in a mutation scanning screen using melting analysis.ResultsAlthough six mutations in exon 4 did not yield usable melting data, 96% (52/54) of the other variants were detected by the melting analysis, while two variants were poorly resolved.ConclusionsMelting analysis is a rapid and sensitive mutation scanning technique, but is not suitable for some GC-rich amplicons such as LDLR exon 4, or exons with high frequencies of benign polymorphisms which would require follow-up DNA sequencing. We developed a successful strategy which combines melting analysis with direct sequencing of problematic amplicons.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
Authors
, ,