Abstract

A fluorescent resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based hybridization assay for detecting multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) products has been developed, extending the diagnostic power of the technique and demonstrating the possibility of combining MLPA with microarrays for the detection of multiple mutations. FRET is one of the most commonly used detection techniques for hybridization assays. To investigate the applicability of FRET based detection of MLPA products, a sandwich assay was designed to detect gene copy number by exploiting an immobilized probe labeled with an acceptor dye, Alexa Fluor 555, which hybridises to specific PCR amplicons, followed by hybridization of a second probe labeled with the donor dye, Alexa Fluor 488. Following excitation of the Alexa Fluor 488, a FRET signal was produced only if a DNA sequence specific to the BRCA1 exon 13 was present in the test sample. We have verified this assay on a DNA sample of a patient carrying a heterozygous BRCA1 exon 13 deletion using male genomic DNA as control. Here we demonstrate that the DNA sample containing the heterozygous deletion generated a considerably reduced FRET signal as compared to the control male human DNA. Our results show that the FRET design presented in this study can differentiate between reduced copy numbers any genomic DNA sequence after MLPA analysis, and the reported format is applicable to multiplex detection of MLPA products, using microarrays, or optical biosensor arrays, and future work will focus on the demonstration of this.

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