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High-Throughput, Multiplex Genotyping Directly from Blood or Dried Blood Spot without DNA Extraction for the Screening of Multiple G6PDGene Variants at Risk for Drug-Induced Hemolysis

Authors :
Tian, Xiaoyi
Zhou, Jun
Zhao, Ye
Cheng, Zhibin
Song, Wenqi
Sun, Yu
Sun, Xiaodong
Zheng, Zhi
Source :
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics; September 2017, Vol. 19 Issue: 5 p638-650, 13p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Clinical or epidemiologic screening of single-nucleotide polymorphism markers requires large-scale multiplexed genotyping. Available genotyping tools require DNA extraction and multiplex PCR, which may limit throughput and suffer amplification bias. Herein, a novel genotyping approach has been developed, multiplex extension and ligation-based probe amplification (MELPA), which eliminates DNA extraction and achieves uniform PCR amplification. MELPA lyses blood or dried blood spot and directly captures specific target DNA to 96-well plates using tailed probes. Subsequent enzymatic extension and ligation form target single-nucleotide polymorphism–spanning single-stranded templates, which are PCR-amplified using universal primers. Multiplexed genotyping by single-base primer extension is analyzed by mass spectrometry, with a call rate >97%. MELPA was compared with a commercial assay (iPLEX) for detecting 24 G6PDvariants known to be at risk for primaquine-induced hemolysis. MELPA provided results that were more reliable than iPLEX, with higher throughput and lower cost. Genotyping archival blood from 106 malaria patients taking primaquine found 10 G6PD-deficient variants, including 1 patient with a hemizygous Mahidol mutation who had hemolysis. Preemptive G6PDgenotyping of 438 dried blood spots from a malaria-endemic area identified three variants. MELPA also enabled pooled genotyping without diluting rare alleles, in which undesired common-allele background increased by sample pooling can be repressed by adding specific common allele blockers. Thus, MELPA represents a high-throughput, cost-effective approach to targeted genotyping at the population level.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15251578
Volume :
19
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs42989824
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmoldx.2017.05.007