4.5 Article

Rapid Genetic Diagnosis of Citrin Deficiency by Multicolor Melting Curve Analysis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.654527

Keywords

citrin deficiency; multicolor melting curve analysis; rapid genetic diagnosis; newborn screening

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81702519]
  2. Fourth Batch of Medical and Health Science and Technology Projects in Jiangmen City [2019D001]
  3. Shenzhen Key Medical Discipline Construction Fund [SZXK054]

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A real-time PCR-based multicolor melting curve analysis (MMCA) method was developed in this study to detect common mutations related to citrin deficiency, showing accurate and reliable results. Analysis of 5,332 newborns in southern China identified a carrier rate of 2% for SLC25A13 mutations.
Citrin deficiency caused by SLC25A13 genetic mutations is an autosomal recessive disease, and four prevalent mutations including c.851_854del, c.1638_1660dup, IVS6+5G>A, and IVS16ins3kb make up >80% of total pathogenic mutations within the Chinese population. However, suitable assays for detection of these mutations have not yet been developed for use in routine clinical practice. In the current study, a real-time PCR-based multicolor melting curve analysis (MMCA) was developed to detect the four prevalent mutations in one closed-tube reaction. The analytical and clinical performances were evaluated using artificial templates and clinical samples. All four mutations in the test samples were accurately genotyped via their labeling fluorophores and Tm values, and the standard deviations of Tm values were indicated to be <0.2 degrees C. The limit of detection was estimated to be 500 diploid human genomes per reaction. The MMCA assay of 5,332 healthy newborns from southern China identified a total of 107 SLC25A13-mutation carriers, indicating a carrier rate of 2%. The genotypes of 107 carriers and 112 random non-carriers were validated using direct sequencing and Long-range PCR with 100% concordance. In conclusion, the assay developed in this study may potentially serve as a rapid genetic diagnostic tool for citrin deficiency.

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