Mutation profile of Bardet‐Biedl syndrome patients from India: Implicative role of multiallelic rare variants and oligogenic inheritance pattern

Author:

Gnanasekaran Harshavardhini12,Chandrasekhar Sathya Priya1,Kandeeban Suganya12,Periyasamy Porkodi1,Bhende Muna3,Khetan Vikas3,Gupta Neerja4,Kabra Madhulika4,Namboothri Sheela5,Sen Parveen4,Sripriya Sarangapani1

Affiliation:

1. SNONGC Department of Genetics and Molecular Biology Vision Research Foundation Chennai Tamilnadu India

2. School of Chemical and Biotechnology SASTRA University Thanjavur Tamilnadu India

3. Division of Genetics, Department of Pediatrics AIIMS New Delhi India

4. Shri Bhagwan Mahavir Vitreoretinal Services Sankara Nethralaya Chennai Tamilnadu India

5. Department of Pediatric Genetics Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre Kochi Kerala India

Abstract

AbstractBardet‐Biedl syndrome (BBS), a rare primary form of ciliopathy, with heterogeneous clinical and genetic presentation is characterized by rod cone dystrophy, obesity, polydactyly, urogenital abnormalities, and cognitive impairment. Here, we delineate the genetic profile in a cohort of 108 BBS patients from India by targeted gene sequencing‐based approach for a panel of ciliopathy (including BBS) and other inherited retinal disease genes. We report here a higher frequency of BBS10 and BBS1 gene variations. A different spectrum of variations including a putatively novel gene TSPOAP1, for BBS was identified. Increased percentage frequency of digenic variants (36%) in the disease cohort, role of modifiers in familial cases are some of the salient observations in this work. This study appends the knowledge of BBS genetics pertaining to patients from India. We observed a different molecular epidemiology of BBS patients in this study cohort compared to other reports, which emphasizes the need for molecular testing in affected patients.

Funder

Indian Council of Medical Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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