Unravelling the Complexity of the +33 C>G [HBB:c.-18C>G] Variant in Beta Thalassemia

Author:

Stephanou Coralea1ORCID,Petrou Miranda1,Kountouris Petros1ORCID,Makariou Christiana2,Christou Soteroula2,Hadjigavriel Michael3,Kleanthous Marina1ORCID,Papasavva Thessalia1

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Genetics Thalassemia Department, The Cyprus Institute of Neurology and Genetics, Nicosia 2371, Cyprus

2. Thalassemia Clinic Nicosia, Archbishop Makarios III Hospital, Nicosia 2012, Cyprus

3. Thalassemia Clinic Limassol, Limassol General Hospital, Limassol 4131, Cyprus

Abstract

The +33 C>G variant [NM_000518.5(HBB):c.-18C>G] in the 5′ untranslated region (UTR) of the β-globin gene is described in the literature as both mild and silent, while it causes a phenotype of thalassemia intermedia in the presence of a severe β-thalassemia allele. Despite its potential clinical significance, the determination of its pathogenicity according to established standards requires a greater number of published cases and co-segregation evidence than what is currently available. The present study provides an extensive phenotypic characterization of +33 C>G using 26 heterozygous and 11 compound heterozygous novel cases detected in Cyprus and employs computational predictors (CADD, RegulomeDB) to better understand its impact on clinical severity. Genotype identification of globin gene variants, including α- and δ-thalassemia determinants, and rs7482144 (XmnI) was carried out using Sanger sequencing, gap-PCR, and restriction enzyme digestion methods. The heterozygous state of +33 C>G had a silent phenotype without apparent microcytosis or hypochromia, while compound heterozygosity with a β+ or β0 allele had a spectrum of clinical phenotypes. Awareness of the +33 C>G is required across Mediterranean populations where β-thalassemia is frequent, particularly in Cyprus, with significant relevance in population screening and fetal diagnostic applications.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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