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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Targeted Re-Sequencing Emulsion PCR Panel for Myopathies: Results in 94 Cases.
Edward C. SmithKathryn N. NorthKathryn N. NorthTulio E. BertoriniEric P. HoffmanEric P. HoffmanMamta GiriGina L. O’gradyIrena Hausmanowa-petrusewiczCarsten G. BönnemannNigel F. ClarkeSandra DonkervoortSarah A. SandaraduraLeigh B. WaddellJaya PunethaPrech UapinyoyingPrech UapinyoyingPaul H. PlotzMark A. TarnopolskyCarolina Tesi-rochaAkanchha KesariRoula GhaouiEmily C. OatesBernd Reittersubject
0301 basic medicineBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionMuscular Dystrophies03 medical and health sciencesExon0302 clinical medicineMuscular DiseasesHumansGenetic TestingGeneExomeExome sequencingGeneticsMassive parallel sequencingHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingSequence Analysis DNAMolecular diagnostics030104 developmental biologyNeurologyMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesRe sequencingMutationHuman genomeNeurology (clinical)030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
BACKGROUND Molecular diagnostics in the genetic myopathies often requires testing of the largest and most complex transcript units in the human genome (DMD, TTN, NEB). Iteratively targeting single genes for sequencing has traditionally entailed high costs and long turnaround times. Exome sequencing has begun to supplant single targeted genes, but there are concerns regarding coverage and needed depth of the very large and complex genes that frequently cause myopathies. OBJECTIVE To evaluate efficiency of next-generation sequencing technologies to provide molecular diagnostics for patients with previously undiagnosed myopathies. METHODS We tested a targeted re-sequencing approach, using a 45 gene emulsion PCR myopathy panel, with subsequent sequencing on the Illumina platform in 94 undiagnosed patients. We compared the targeted re-sequencing approach to exome sequencing for 10 of these patients studied. RESULTS We detected likely pathogenic mutations in 33 out of 94 patients with a molecular diagnostic rate of approximately 35%. The remaining patients showed variants of unknown significance (35/94 patients) or no mutations detected in the 45 genes tested (26/94 patients). Mutation detection rates for targeted re-sequencing vs. whole exome were similar in both methods; however exome sequencing showed better distribution of reads and fewer exon dropouts. CONCLUSIONS Given that costs of highly parallel re-sequencing and whole exome sequencing are similar, and that exome sequencing now takes considerably less laboratory processing time than targeted re-sequencing, we recommend exome sequencing as the standard approach for molecular diagnostics of myopathies.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-11-18 |