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Filter Results:

Year

  • 2008 (1)

Author

  • Chin, Ephrem L.H. (1)
  • Hegde, Madhuri (1)
  • Mulle, Jennifer (1)
  • Okou, David T. (1)
  • Warren, Stephen (1)
  • Zwick, Michael (1)

Subject

  • Biology, Genetics (1)

Journal

  • Human Mutation (1)

Keyword

  • array (1)
  • becker (1)
  • bmd (1)
  • cgh (1)
  • cnv (1)
  • copi (1)
  • dmd (1)
  • duchenn (1)
  • dystrophin (1)
  • exon (1)
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  • microarray (1)
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  • number (1)

Author department

  • Peds: Gastroenterology (1)

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  • variat
  • dystrophi
  • Secondary Appointment: Department of Pediatrics
  • Hum Gen: Admin

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Article

Microarray-based mutation detection in the dystrophin gene

by Madhuri Hegde; Ephrem L.H. Chin; Jennifer Mulle; David T. Okou; Stephen Warren; Michael Zwick

2008

Subjects
  • Biology, Genetics
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Abstract:Close

Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD and BMD) are X-linked recessive neuromuscular disorders caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene affecting approximately 1 in 3,500 males. The human dystrophin gene spans > 2,200 kb, or roughly 0.1% of the genome, and is composed of 79 exons. The mutational spectrum of disease-causing alleles, including exonic copy number variations (CNVs), is complex. Deletions account for approximately 65% of DMD mutations and 85% of BMD mutations. Duplications occur in approximately 6–10% of males with either DMD or BMD. The remaining 30–35% of mutations consist of small deletions, insertions, point mutations, or splicing mutations, most of which introduce a premature stop codon. Laboratory analysis of dystrophin can be used to confirm a clinical diagnosis of DMD, characterize the type of dystrophin mutation, and perform prenatal testing and carrier testing for females. Current dystrophin diagnostic assays involve a variety of methodologies, including multiplex PCR, Southern blot analysis, MLPA, DOVAM-S, and SCAIP; however, these methods are time-consuming, laborious, and do not accurately detect duplication mutations in the dystrophin gene. Furthermore, carrier testing in females is often difficult when a related affected male is unavailable. Here we describe the development, design, validation, and implementation of a high-resolution CGH microarray-based approach capable of accurately detecting both deletions and duplications in the dystrophin gene. This assay can be readily adopted by clinical molecular testing laboratories and represents a rapid, cost-effective approach for screening a large gene, such as dystrophin.
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