Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6112401 The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Approximately 90% of patients with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) exhibit dominant COL1A1 or COL1A2 mutations; however, molecular analysis is difficult because these genes span 51 and 52 exons, respectively. We devised a PCR-denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) procedure to analyze the COL1A1 or COL1A2 coding regions and validated it using 130 DNA samples from individuals without OI, 25 DNA samples from two cells to investigate the procedure's potential for preimplantation diagnosis, and DNA samples from 10 patients with OI. Three novel intronic variants in vitro were expressed using a minigene assay to assess their effects on splicing. The procedure is rapid, inexpensive, and reproducible. Analysis of samples from individuals without OI revealed six novel and some known polymorphisms useful for linkage diagnosis because of high heterozygosity. Analysis of two-cell samples confirmed the known genotype in 24 of 25 experiments; DNA failed to amplify in only one case. No incidence of allele dropout was recorded. DHPLC revealed six novel mutations, three of which were intronic, in all patients with OI, and these results were confirmed by means of COL1A1 and COL1A2 direct sequencing. Expression of intronic mutations demonstrated that variant 804 + 2_804 + 3delTG in intron 11 disrupts normal splicing, thereby leading to formation of two alternative products. Variants c.3046-4_3046-5dupCT (COL1A1) and c.891 + 77A>T (COL1A2) did not affect splicing. The described DHPLC protocol combined with the minigene assay may contribute to molecular diagnosis in OI. Moreover, this protocol will aid in counseling about prenatal and preimplantation diagnosis.

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