Non-specific intellectual disability of autosomal recessive inheritance (NS-ARID) represents an important fraction of severe cognitive dysfunction disorders. To date, only 10 genes have been identified, and further 24 linked-ARID loci have been reported, as well as others with suggestive linkage. To discover novel genes causing NS-ARID, we undertook genome-wide homozygosity mapping in 64 consanguineous multiplex families of Syrian descent. A total of 11 families revealed unique, significantly linked loci at 4q26-4q28 (MRT17), 6q12-q15 (MRT18), 18p11 (MRT19), 16p12-q12 (MRT20), 11p15 (MRT21), 11p13-q14 (MRT23), 6p12 (MRT24), 12q13-q15 (MRT25), 14q11-q12 (MRT26), 15q23-q26 (MRT27), and 6q26-q27 (MRT28), respectively. Loci ranged between 1.2 and 45.6 Mb in length. One family showed linkage to chromosome 8q24.3, and we identified a mutation in TRAPPC9. Our study further highlights the extreme heterogeneity of NS-ARID, and suggests that no major disease gene is to be expected, at least in this study group. Systematic analysis of large numbers of affected families, as presented here, will help discovering the genetic causes of ID.
Electroactive nucleoside triphosphates ("electrotides") have been incorporated into primers by DNA polymerase and detected on oligonucleotide surface-assembled monolayers. Four electrotides bearing three different electroactive moieties-ferrocene, vinylferrocene, and anthraquinone-are detected in four alternative formats.
Ferrocene and anthraquinone were used to label RNA (red, dark blue), which could then be detected at an electrode surface bearing complementary DNA oligonucleotide probes (light blue). This approach is an electrochemical analog of popular fluorescence methods for gene expression analysis.
The use of proofreading DNA polymerases in genotyping assays offers the prospect of improved performance. To this end, we have recently used compatible DNA polymerases, protected primers, and substrates to implement proofreading single base extension (P-SBE) and proofreading allele-specific extension (PRASE) assays. Key aspects of the P-SBE and related proofreading assay formats are described here.
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