[HTML][HTML] qKAT: a high-throughput qPCR method for KIR gene copy number and haplotype determination

W Jiang, C Johnson, N Simecek, MR López-Álvarez… - Genome medicine, 2016 - Springer
W Jiang, C Johnson, N Simecek, MR López-Álvarez, D Di, J Trowsdale, JA Traherne
Genome medicine, 2016Springer
Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs), expressed on natural killer cells and T cells,
have considerable biomedical relevance playing significant roles in immunity, pregnancy
and transplantation. The KIR locus is one of the most complex and polymorphic regions of
the human genome. Extensive sequence homology and copy number variation makes KIR s
technically laborious and expensive to type. To aid the investigation of KIR s in human
disease we developed a high-throughput, multiplex real-time polymerase chain reaction …
Abstract
Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs), expressed on natural killer cells and T cells, have considerable biomedical relevance playing significant roles in immunity, pregnancy and transplantation. The KIR locus is one of the most complex and polymorphic regions of the human genome. Extensive sequence homology and copy number variation makes KIRs technically laborious and expensive to type. To aid the investigation of KIRs in human disease we developed a high-throughput, multiplex real-time polymerase chain reaction method to determine gene copy number for each KIR locus. We used reference DNA samples to validate the accuracy and a cohort of 1698 individuals to evaluate capability for precise copy number discrimination. The method provides improved information and identifies KIR haplotype alterations that were not previously visible using other approaches.
Springer