Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) (von Recklinghausen) is a common autosomal dominant disorder, characterised by the presence of peripheral neurofibromas, café-au-lait spots and Lisch nodules of the iris. Due to the high mutation rate at the NF1 locus, most patients are expected to have different mutations, limiting molecular analysis and genetic counseling to the identification of the mutation in each patient or family, or to the use of DNA polymorphisms. We have analysed an Alu-repeat polymorphic sequence (AAAT), located in intron 27 of the NF1 gene, in 70 NF1 and 40 CEPH families and we have detected several genetic and molecular abnormalities. In two families the NF1 individuals were hemizygous at the AAAT-repeat and/or at the CA-repeat of intron 27 of NF1, due to interstitial deletions, which include intron 27 to exon 37 of the NF1 gene. A 71-bp deletion at the Alu sequence was detected in non-NF1 chromosomes of members of three NF1 families. New alleles at the AAAT-repeat were found in one NF1 family and in three CEPH families giving a mutation rate for this AAAT-repeat of 0.36% per allele, which is one of the highest detected for a microsatellite locus.
We have developed a simple, straightforward procedure to isolate exons from cloned human genomic DNA. The method is PCR based and relies upon the conservation of splice-site sequences and the frequency of Alu repeat elements in the genome to capture coding sequences. We designed two different sets of primers: a primer from each end of the Alu element and primers with the 5' or 3' splice-site consensus sequences. Putative exons were amplified by PCR using YAC DNA as starting material. We applied Alu-splice PCR to two overlapping YACs, 72H9 and 860G11, from human chromosome 21. Sequence and northern analysis of 37 initial clones resulted in the identification of five novel exons.
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