Back to Search Start Over

Detection of clinically relevant exonic copy-number changes by array CGH

Authors :
Sau Wai Cheung
Arthur L. Beaudet
Yaping Yang
Frank J. Probst
Tomasz Gambin
James B. Gibson
Philip M. Boone
Magdalena Bartnik
Amber N. Pursley
Zhilian Xia
Patricia A. Eng
Weimin Bi
Joanna Wiszniewska
Barbara Wisniowiecka-Kowalnik
Lorraine Potocki
Seema R. Lalani
Tyler Reimschisel
Katarzyna Derwińska
Carlos A. Bacino
Ankita Patel
Pawel Stankiewicz
James R. Lupski
Daniela del Gaudio
Fernando Scaglia
Christian P. Schaaf
Jennifer A. Bowers
Anne C.H. Tsai
Maciej Sykulski
Chad A. Shaw
La Donna Immken
Patricia Hixson
Beata Nowakowska
Sung Hae L. Kang
Gayle Simpson-Patel
Source :
Human mutation. 31(12)
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) is a powerful tool for the molecular elucidation and diagnosis of disorders resulting from genomic copy-number variation (CNV). However, intragenic deletions or duplications--those including genomic intervals of a size smaller than a gene--have remained beyond the detection limit of most clinical aCGH analyses. Increasing array probe number improves genomic resolution, although higher cost may limit implementation, and enhanced detection of benign CNV can confound clinical interpretation. We designed an array with exonic coverage of selected disease and candidate genes and used it clinically to identify losses or gains throughout the genome involving at least one exon and as small as several hundred base pairs in size. In some patients, the detected copy-number change occurs within a gene known to be causative of the observed clinical phenotype, demonstrating the ability of this array to detect clinically relevant CNVs with subkilobase resolution. In summary, we demonstrate the utility of a custom-designed, exon-targeted oligonucleotide array to detect intragenic copy-number changes in patients with various clinical phenotypes.

Details

ISSN :
10981004
Volume :
31
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0147ce24b2ad7e8c1b356b96d9c81ad