Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6112661 | The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2013 | 7 Pages |
CYP2C19 is involved in the metabolism of clinically relevant drugs, including the antiplatelet prodrug clopidogrel, which has prompted interest in clinical CYP2C19 genotyping. The CYP2C19â4B allele is defined by both gain-of-function [c.â806C>T (â17)] and loss-of-function [c.1A>G (â4)] variants on the same haplotype; however, current genotyping and sequencing assays are unable to determine the phase of these variants. Thus, the aim of this study was to develop an assay that could rapidly detect and discriminate the related â4A, â4B, and â17 alleles. An allele-specific PCR assay, composed of four unique primer mixes that specifically interrogate the defining â17 and â4 variants, was developed by using samples (n = 20) with known genotypes, including the â4A, â4B, and/or â17 alleles. The assay was validated by testing 135 blinded samples, and the results were correlated with CYP2C19 genotyping and allele-specific cloning/sequencing. Importantly, among the six â4 carriers in the validation cohort, after allele-specific PCR testing both samples with a â1/â4 genotype were reclassified to â1/â4A, all three samples with a â4/â17 genotype were reclassified to â1/â4B, and a sample with a â4/â17/â17 genotype was reclassified to â4B/â17. In conclusion, this rapid and robust allele-specific PCR assay can refine CYP2C19 genotyping and metabolizer phenotype classification by determining the phase of the defining â17 and â4 variants, which may have utility when testing CYP2C19 for clopidogrel response.