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1.
L Yuge  L Hui  X Bingdi 《Life sciences》1999,65(9):863-869
One hundred thirty-eight patients with Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD) were screened with complete cDNA probes and the multiplex polymerase chain reaction (mPCR) amplification of 18 pairs of oligonucleotide primers. Eighty-six deletions and 4 duplications were detected, the deletion frequency being 62.3%. Eighty-two deletions were detected with the two sets of primers described by Chamberlain et al. and Beggs et al, which was 95.4% of deletions detected by complete cDNA probes. Consistent with the deletion locations described previously, the deletions of dystrophin gene in Chinese individuals are clustered mainly in two high-frequency deletion regions of exons 44-52 (68.6%) of 3' side of the gene central regions and exons 1-19 (26.7%) in the 5' side. The distribution of deletions in dystrophin gene is associated with the phenotype of DMD/BMD. In the 25 cases with in-frame deletions, 15 deletions located in the region of exons 2-47 were milder BMD and intermediate patients, as the location of deletions was not the important region of the dystrophin gene.  相似文献   

2.
Summary We studied 38 unrelated patients from southern France with Duchenne (DMD) or Decker (BMD) muscular dystrophy for intragenic deletions of the DMD/ BMD gene. We used both multiplex amplification of selected exons and cDNA probes. Of the 26 (68%) unrelated individuals found to have deletions, 24 (92%) were detected by multiplex polymerase chain reaction. All these deletions have been delineated with regard to the exon-containing HindIII fragments revealed by cDNA probes, and in two cases, junction fragments of altered size were seen. The correlation between phenotype and type of deletion agreed with the reading frame theory, except for two BMD and two DMD cases.  相似文献   

3.
About 60% of both Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) is due to deletions of the dystrophin gene. For cases with a deletion mutation, the "reading frame" hypothesis predicts that BMD patients produce a semifunctional, internally deleted dystrophin protein, whereas DMD patients produce a severely truncated protein that would be unstable. To test the validity of this theory, we analyzed 258 independent deletions at the DMD/BMD locus. The correlation between phenotype and type of deletion mutation is in agreement with the "reading frame" theory in 92% of cases and is of diagnostic and prognostic significance. The distribution and frequency of deletions spanning the entire locus suggests that many "in-frame" deletions of the dystrophin gene are not detected because the individuals bearing them are either asymptomatic or exhibit non-DMD/non-BMD clinical features.  相似文献   

4.
Gene deletions in X-linked muscular dystrophy   总被引:14,自引:3,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
Of the approximately 170 families with X-linked muscular dystrophy of the Duchenne (DMD) and Becker (BMD) type in Finland, we have studied 90 unrelated patients for intragenic deletions by using the cDNA probes described by Koenig et al. Forty-five patients (50%) had molecular deletions of one or several of the 65 exon-containing HindIII fragments. In six deletion cases junction fragments of altered size were seen. Thirty-eight (84%) of the 45 deletions were detected using only two (1–2a and 8) of the six cDNA subclones. Using a wheelchair age of 12 years to distinguish between DMD and BMD, we found that the proportions of patients with deletions were similar. Deletions were equally common in familial and sporadic disease. BMD was more commonly caused by deletions in the 5' end of the gene than was DMD. In at least three instances deletions of similar type resulted in diseases of similar severity. Of 14 patients with mental retardation seven had deletions; six of these comprised exons contained in probe 8. We conclude that cDNA hybridization studies provide a powerful diagnostic tool in DMD and BMD and that they promise to produce better insights into molecular-clinical correlations.  相似文献   

5.
Fetal muscle cDNA clones covering at least 11.4 kb of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene sequence were used to identify a deletion-prone region in DNA from DMD and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) patients. Of 36 BMD cases, 17 (47%) had deletions and all of the deletions began in the same intron of the gene. Of 107 DMD patients, 27 (25%) were deleted for this region, and 19 deletions originate in the same intron. Using a cDNA probe for an adjacent region of the gene, 32 new deletions were detected in DMD patients (total 44%). No new BMD deletions were detected. The DMD deletions were very heterogeneous. Thus two cDNA probes covering 2.4 kb could detect 53% of these deletions. Considering the whole locus, DMD and BMD are caused by a deletion of the gene sequence in at least 67% of cases.  相似文献   

6.
Summary We have analyzed patient DNA samples in 77 unrelated Duchenne (DMD) and Becker (BMD) muscular dystrophy families, 73 of which were of French Canadian origin. We show that the frequency (68%) and distribution of deletions within the dystrophin gene was neither random nor unique in this population. We localized 33% of the deletions to the proximal portion of the dystrophin gene while 63% involved the exons spanning introns 43 through 55 with breakpoint clusters occurring within introns 44 and 50. Whether the dystrophin open reading frame (ORF) is maintained constrains the distribution of DMD/BMD deletions such that BMD deletions tend to be strikingly homogeneous. Finally, the conservation of the dystrophin ORF and the severity of the clinical phenotype were concordant in 95% of the DMD/BMD deletions documented by this work.  相似文献   

7.
A deletion hot spot in the Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene   总被引:28,自引:0,他引:28  
We have made a detailed study of a deletion hot spot in the distal half of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene, using intragenic probe P20 (DXS269), isolated by a hybrid cell-mediated cloning procedure. P20 detects 16% deletions in patients suffering from either DMD or Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD), in sharp contrast to the adjacent intragenic markers JBir (7%) and J66 (less than 1%), mapping respectively 200-320 kb proximal and 380-500 kb distal to P20. Of the P20 deletions, 30% start within a region of 25-40 kb, the majority extending distally. P20 was confirmed to map internal to a distal intron of the DMD gene. This region was recently shown by both cDNA analysis (M. Koenig et al., 1987; Cell 50: 509-517), and field inversion electrophoresis studies (J.T. Den Dunnen et al., 1987, Nature (London) 329: 640-642) to be specifically prone to deletions. In addition, P20 detects MspI and EcoRV RFLPs, informative in 48% of the carrier females. Together, these properties make P20 useful for carrier detection, prenatal diagnosis, and the study of deletion induction in both DMD and BMD.  相似文献   

8.
The most frequent causes for the X-linked muscular dystrophy of the allelic Duchenne (DMD) or Becker (BMD) type are partial deletions of the dystrophin gene. These mutations are accompanied either by disrupted or by preserved translational reading frames in mRNAs derived from the deleted genes. As a rule, the reading frame is destroyed in the more severe DMD, whereas it is preserved in the less severe BMD (M. Koenig et al., 1989, Am. J. Hum. Genet. 45, 498-506). We have analyzed in detail a deletion that was detected in a fetus at risk of DMD. The analysis of this mutation included the delineation of the altered subregion in the dystrophin mRNA. mRNA was isolated from myotubes derived from embryonic DMD myoblasts propagated in vitro. This study was based on enzymatic amplification by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of dystrophin mRNA and direct sequencing of the amplified cDNA. Exons 47 to 50 were found to be missing in the mRNA. The splicing of exon 46 to exon 51 resulted in a reading frameshift, indicating that this mutation is likely to be responsible for a DMD type of dystrophy. The clinical diagnosis of DMD for a 10-year-old patient in this family was compatible with the "reading frame" assumption.  相似文献   

9.
Patterns of exon deletions in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Summary A panel of patients with Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD and BMD) has been screened with the cDNA probes Cf56a and Cf23a, which detect exons in the central part of the DMD gene. One or more exons were deleted in 60% of patients. The deletions were mapped and prove to be heterogeneous in size and extent, particularly in DMD. Deletions specific to DMD and to BMD are described. Half of all BMD patients have a deletion of one particular small group of exons; smaller deletions within this same group produce the more severe DMD.  相似文献   

10.
Summary A DNA deletion in a patient with Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) has been delineated by restriction endonuclease mapping. The deletion is unusually small, removing six kilobases (kb) of DNA distal to pERT 87-1 (DXS164). This region has previously been shown to contain an exon of a candidate gene which, when defective, causes Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) or Becker muscular dystrophy. Removal of this exon and surrounding DNA is apparently sufficient, in this case, to cause a BMD phenotype. The occurrence of this deletion in DXS164 would appear to confirm that this region is part of the BMD locus. Many DMD patients have deletions in and around this region, adding further evidence for the allelic nature of the two disorders. This fortuitous deletion may identify a functionally important domain of the protein product in terms of the severity of phenotype manifested.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular deletion patterns in Duchenne and Becker type muscular dystrophy   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3  
Summary DNA from 80 Duchenne (DMD) and 15 Becker (BMD) index patients was analyzed with 12 genomic probes and the total cDNA. Deletions were detected in 24 DMD (30%) and 10 BMD patients (67%) by genomic probes alone, mostly p20, pXJ, and/or pERT87. All deletions were confirmed by cDNA probes, and an additional 29 DMD deletions were detected, resulting in a total of 63/95 deletions (66%). The majority of the deletions are localized between kb 6.7 and 9.7 of the cDNA; a smaller group, between kb 0.5 and 3.5. Of the deletions, 90% are detected by the three cDNA probes 1–2a, 7, and 8. This can be applied to strategies for carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis. The order of 13 exon-containing HindIII fragments in the region between probes 7 and 9–10, where most of the deletions are found, could be defined. The deletion patterns in DMD and BMD patients are different and well in accordance with the “reading frame theory” of Monaco and coworkers. Thus our findings indicate that a DMD or BMD phenotype may be predicted according to the breakpoint position and the number of deleted exons.  相似文献   

12.
Deletions giving rise to Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and the less severe Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) occur in the same large gene on the short arm of the human X chromosome. We present a molecular mechanism to explain the clinical difference in severity between DMD and BMD patients who bear partial deletions of the same gene locus. The model is based on the breakpoints of intragenic deletions and their effect on the translation of triplet codons into amino acids of the protein product. Deletions identified in three DMD patients are shown to shift the translational open reading frame (ORF) of triplet codons for amino acids, and each deletion is predicted to result in a truncated, abnormal protein product. Deletions identified in three BMD patients are shown to maintain the translational ORF for amino acids and predict a shorter, lower molecular weight protein. The smaller protein product is presumed to be semifunctional and to result in a milder clinical phenotype. The same ORF mechanism is also applicable to potential 5' and 3' intron splice mutations and their effect on protein production and clinical phenotype.  相似文献   

13.
14.
We have isolated overlapping human fetal muscle cDNAs encompassing 2.6kb which are localised very close to the 5' end of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene. Using DNA from patients with deletions of previously reported genomic probes, we have mapped the exons across the region. Investigation of deletions in both DMD and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) patients shows the deletions to be present in 10% of cases and heterogeneous.  相似文献   

15.
Partial gene deletion is the major cause of mutation leading to Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). Partial gene duplication has also been recognized in a few cases. We have conducted a survey for duplication in 72 unrelated nondeletion patients, analyzed by Southern blot hybridization with clones representing the entire DMD cDNA. With careful quantitative analysis of hybridization band intensity, 10 cases were found to carry a duplication of part of the gene, a frequency of 14% for nondeletion cases (10/72), or 6% for all cases (10/181). The extent of these duplications has been characterized according to the published exon-containing HindIII fragment map, and in six of the 10 duplications a novel restriction fragment that spanned the duplication junction was detected. The resulting translational reading frame of mRNA has been predicted for nine duplications. A shift of the reading frame was predicted in four of the six DMD cases and in one of the two intermediate cases, while the reading frame remained uninterrupted in both BMD cases. RFLP and quantitative Southern blot analyses revealed a grandpaternal origin of duplication in four families and grandmaternal origin in one family. In all five families, the duplication was found to originate from a single X chromosome. Unequal sister-chromatid exchange is proposed to be the mechanism for the formation of these duplications.  相似文献   

16.
DNA deletions in mild and severe Becker muscular dystrophy   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Summary The DNA of 33 patients diagnosed as suffering from Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) has been probed with cloned DNA sequences from Xp21, known to reveal DNA deletions in patients suffering from the more severe Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Two BMD cases showed clear deletions. A third case gave aberrant band sizes, which further analysis showed to be caused by a small deletion. This suggests that deletions in DXS164 occur approximately as frequently in BMD as they do in DMD. Of the two cases showing large deletions, one is at the severe end of the Becker clinical spectrum, whilst the other is a classical Becker-type dystrophy. The fact that loci defined by probes commonly deleted in classical DMD patients are also deleted in BMD patients of varying severity is strong additional evidence that these disorders are allelic, and further justifies the use of probes with defined linkage relationships to DMD also being used for counselling in BMD families.  相似文献   

17.
Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD and BMD) are two allelic recessive X-linked disorders. Molecular deletions of various regions of the dystrophin gene are the main mutations detected in DMD and BMD patients. Molecular study of DMD and BMD DNA are instrumental to understand the pathological molecular mechanisms and the function of the protein. We describe here dystrophin and its interaction with a glycoprotein complex and we then focus on two particular patients with partial deletions of the dystrophin gene: 1) a typical Becker patient, who shows an intragenic deletion disrupting the reading frame. We describe in this case alternative splicings restoring the reading frame, which might explain the mild clinical phenotype of this patient, 2) a deletion of the distal part of the DMD gene coding for the carboxyterminal domain of the dystrophin in a young patient. The normal localization of dystrophin at the inner face of the plasma membrane in the muscle of this patient suggests that the last domain of this protein is not sufficient to anchor dystrophin at the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Comprehensive molecular testing for mutations in the DMD gene causing Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD) is challenging because of the large size of the gene and the variety of mutation types. There is an increasing demand for comprehensive DMD gene molecular testing, including deletion/duplication testing of 79 exons and direct sequencing of the 14-kb coding region from genomic DNA, to provide confirmation of clinical diagnoses in affected patients and to determine carrier risk for family members. To determine an efficient strategy to prioritize patients for comprehensive molecular testing of the DMD gene, we tested a consecutive cohort of 165 males referred over a 4-year period because of a suspicion of DMD or BMD using: (1) a new quantitative multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay designed to detect deletions or duplications in all exons of the gene and the brain promoter and (2) direct sequencing of the coding region and intron/exon boundaries. For the patients being tested because of a suspicion of DMD, deletion/duplication testing followed by direct sequencing detected pathogenic mutations in 98% (106/108 total patients). However, of the patients tested because of a suspicion of BMD, only 60% (34/57 total patients) had causative mutations identified, all of which were deletions or duplications. Our results suggest that direct genomic sequence analysis of the DMD gene is a useful addition to deletion/duplication testing for diagnosis of DMD, but does not provide an improved sensitivity compared to deletion/duplication analysis alone for the diagnosis of BMD. In addition, due to the relatively common finding of single exon deletions and duplications (22%, 27 of 125 total patients with deletions/duplications), methods to examine all exons of the gene for deletions/duplications should be used as the initial molecular quantitative test for DMD and BMD.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Golden retriever muscular dystrophy (GRMD) is a spontaneous, X-linked, progressively fatal disease of dogs and is also a homologue of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Two-thirds of DMD patients carry detectable deletions in their dystrophin gene. The defect underlying the remaining one-third of DMD patients is undetermined. Analysis of the canine dystrophin gene in normal and GRMD dogs has failed to demonstrate any detectable loss of exons. Here, we have demonstrated a RNA processing error in GRMD that results from a single base change in the 3' consensus splice site of intron 6. The seventh exon is then skipped, which predicts a termination of the dystrophin reading frame within its N-terminal domain in exon 8. This is the first example of dystrophin deficiency caused by a splice-site mutation.  相似文献   

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