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Similarity of DMD gene deletion and duplication in the Chinese patients compared to global populations

Written by admin on May 15th, 2008 | Filed under: neurology UPDATE

Background:
DNA deletion and duplication were determined as the major mutation underlying Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). MethodApplying multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), we have analyzed 179 unrelated DMD/BMD subjects from northern China.
Result: Seventy-three percent of the subjects were found having a deletion (66.25%) or duplication (6.25%). Exons 51-52 were detected as the most common fragment deleted in single-exon deletion, and the region of exons 45-50 was the most common exons deleted in multi-exon deletions. About 90% of DMD/BMD cases carry a small size deletion that involves 10 exons or less, 26.67% of which carry a single-exon deletion. Most of the smaller deletions resulted in out-of-frame mutation. The most common exons deleted were determined to be between exon 48 and exon 52, with exon 50 was the model allele. Verifying single-exon deletion, one sample with a deletion of exon 53 that was initially observed from MLPA showed that there was a single base deletion that abolished the ligation site in MLPA. Confirmation of single-exon deletion is recommended to exclude single base deletion or mutation at the MLPA ligation site.
Conclusion:
The frequency of deletion and duplication in northern China is similar to global ethnic populations.

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