Reliable and sensitive detection of premature termination mutations using a protein truncation test designed to overcome problems of nonsense-mediated mRNA instability

John F. Bateman, Susanna Freddi, Shireen R. Lamandé, Peter Byers, Steven Nasioulas, Jenny Douglas, Robyn Otway, Maija Kohonen-Corish, Edward Edkins, Susan Forrest

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

56 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The protein truncation test (PTT) is a mutation-detection method used to scan for premature termination (nonsense) mutations. PCR amplification of the DNA or mRNA source material is performed using forward primers containing a T7-promoter sequence and translation initiation signals such that the resultant products can be transcribed and translated in vitro to identify the smaller truncated protein products. mRNA is commonly used as the source material, but success of the PTT and other RNA-based mutation detection methods can be severely compromised by nonsense mutation-induced mRNA decay, a well-documented process that is often overlooked in mutation detection strategies. In this study, we develop an RNA-based PTT that overcomes the problem of mRNA decay by preincubating cells with cycloheximide to stabilise the mutant mRNA. The effectiveness of this method for mutation detection in abundant mRNAs was demonstrated in osteogenesis imperfecta fibroblasts by the protection of type I collagen (COL1A1) mRNA containing nonsense mutations that normally resulted in mutant mRNA degradation. Stabilisation of mutant mismatch repair gene (MLH1) mRNA was also observed in transformed lymphocytes from patients with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC). Importantly, our strategy also stabilised very low-level (or illegitimate) nonsense-containing transcripts in lymphoblasts from patients with Bethlem myopathy (COL6A1), familial adenomatous polyposis (APC), and breast cancer (BRCA1). The greatly increased sensitivity and reliability of this RT-PCR/PTT protocol has broad applicability to the many genetic diseases in which only blood-derived cells may be readily available for analysis.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)311-317
Number of pages7
JournalHuman Mutation
Volume13
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1999
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

A corrigenda exists for this article, and can be found in Human Mutation (1999) Vol 14(1) p. 86 at doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1004(1999)14:1<86::AID-HUMU12>3.0.CO;2-W

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