Identification of mutations in the repeated part of the autosomal dominantpolycystic kidney disease type 1 gene, PKD1, by long-range PCR

Citation
R. Thomas et al., Identification of mutations in the repeated part of the autosomal dominantpolycystic kidney disease type 1 gene, PKD1, by long-range PCR, AM J HU GEN, 65(1), 1999, pp. 39-49
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Research/Laboratory Medicine & Medical Tecnology","Molecular Biology & Genetics
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
ISSN journal
00029297 → ACNP
Volume
65
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
39 - 49
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9297(199907)65:1<39:IOMITR>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
We have used long-range PCR to identify mutations in the duplicated part of the PKD1 gene. By means of a PKD1-specific primer in intron 1, an similar to 13.6-kb PCR product that includes exons 2-15 of the PKD1 gene has been u sed to search for mutations, by direct sequence analysis. This region conta ins the majority of the predicted extracellular domains of the PKD1-gene pr oduct, polycystin, including the 16 novel PKD domains that have similarity to immunoglobulin-like domains found in many cell-adhesion molecules and ce ll-surface receptors. Direct sequence analysis of exons encoding all the 16 PKD domains was performed on PCR products from a group of 24 unrelated pat ients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD [MIM 173900] ). Seven novel mutations were found in a screening of 42% of the PKD1-codin g region in each patient, representing a 29% detection rate; these mutation s included two deletions (one of 3 kb and the other of 28 bp), one single-b ase insertion, and four nucleotide substitutions (one splice site, one nons ense, and two missense). Five of these mutations would be predicted to caus e a prematurely truncated protein. Two coding and 18 silent polymorphisms w ere also found. When, for the PKD1 gene, this method is coupled with existi ng mutation-detection methods, virtually the whole of this large, complex g ene can now be screened for mutations.