Genetic insight into Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome in Indian patients reveals novel mutations at FLCN
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Published:2022-04-27
Issue:1
Volume:17
Page:
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ISSN:1750-1172
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Container-title:Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Orphanet J Rare Dis
Author:
Ray Anindita, Chattopadhyay Esita, Singh Richa, Ghosh Saurabh, Bera Arnab, Sarma Mridul, Munot Mahavir, Desai Unnati, Rajan Sujeet, Prabhudesai Pralhad, Prakash Ashish K., Roy Chowdhury Sushmita, Bhowmick Niladri, Dhar Raja, Udwadia Zarir F., Dey Atin, Mitra Subhra, Joshi Jyotsna M., Maitra Arindam, Roy BidyutORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome (BHDS) is a rare monogenic condition mostly associated with germline mutations at FLCN. It is characterized by either one or more manifestations of primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP), skin fibrofolliculomas and renal carcinoma (chromophobe). Here, we comprehensively studied the mutational background of 31 clinically diagnosed BHDS patients and their 74 asymptomatic related members from 15 Indian families.
Results
Targeted amplicon next-generation sequencing (NGS) and Sanger sequencing of FLCN in patients and asymptomatic members revealed a total of 76 variants. Among these variants, six different types of pathogenic FLCN mutations were detected in 26 patients and some asymptomatic family members. Two of the variants were novel mutations: an 11-nucleotide deletion (c.1150_1160delGTCCAGTCAGC) and a splice acceptor mutation (c.1301-1G > A). Two variants were Clinvar reported pathogenic mutations: a stop-gain (c.634C > T) and a 4-nucleotide duplication (c.1329_1332dupAGCC). Two known variants were: hotspot deletion (c.1285delC) and a splice donor mutation (c.1300 + 1G > A). FLCN mutations could not be detected in patients and asymptomatic members from 5 families. All these mutations greatly affected the protein stability and FLCN-FNIP2 interaction as observed by molecular docking method. Family-based association study inferred pathogenic FLCN mutations are significantly associated with BHDS.
Conclusion
Six pathogenic FLCN mutations were detected in patients from 10 families out of 15 families in the cohort. Therefore, genetic screening is necessary to validate the clinical diagnosis. The pathogenic mutations at FLCN affects the protein–protein interaction, which plays key roles in various metabolic pathways. Since, pathogenic mutations could not be detected in exonic regions of FLCN in 5 families, whole genome sequencing is necessary to detect all mutations at FLCN and/or any undescribed gene/s that may also be implicated in BHDS.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Genetics (clinical),General Medicine
Reference51 articles.
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