A fast microelectronic array for screening and prenatal diagnosis of beta-thalassemia

Methods in Molecular Biology
Barbara FoglieniLaura Cremonesi

Abstract

The electronic microchip is a recently developed technology for the fast and reliable detection of known single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the genome. The DNA fragment to be analyzed is directed electrophoretically into the chip, and then it is hybridized with fluorescent-tagged DNA probes specific for the mutant and wild-type sequences. The presence or absence of the mutation is detected by the fluorescence signal. Electronic stringency provides quality control for the hybridization process and ensures that any bound pairs of DNA are truly complementary; the microchip can be easily customized by the end user, allowing for assembly of specific probes onto the microchip to perform individualized analyses. Assays for 10 frequent mutations in the beta-globin gene causing beta-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia are presented that can be applied, in turn, to population screening or family study and prenatal diagnosis in single cases.

Citations

Apr 17, 2010·American Journal of Clinical Pathology·Owen T M ChanIris Schrijver
Aug 1, 2012·International Journal of Hematology·Wakako SuzukiIkuo Honma

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Anemia

Anemia develops when your blood lacks enough healthy red blood cells. Anemia of inflammation (AI, also called anemia of chronic disease) is a common, typically normocytic, normochromic anemia that is caused by an underlying inflammatory disease. Here is the latest research on anemia.

Blood And Marrow Transplantation

The use of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or blood and marrow transplantation (bmt) is on the increase worldwide. BMT is used to replace damaged or destroyed bone marrow with healthy bone marrow stem cells. Here is the latest research on bone and marrow transplantation.