Abstract
β-thalassemia is the most prevalent single-gene disorder. Since no viable forms of treatment are available, the best course is prevention through prenatal diagnosis. In the present study, the prevalence of β-thalassemia was extensively investigated in the South Indian population, especially from the state of Andhra Pradesh. Screening for causal mutations was carried out on genomic DNA isolated from patient blood samples by using the routine reverse dot blot (RDB) and amplification refractory mutation system-polymerase chain reaction (ARMS-PCR) techniques. DNA sequencing was performed wherever necessary. Among the nine mutations identified, four, including IVS-1-5 (G-C) (IVS1+5G>T), codon 41/42 (-TTCT) (c.124_127delTTCT), codon 15 (G-A) (c.47G>A), and HbS (sickle mutation) (c.20A>T) mutations, accounted for about 98% of the total positive cases. Two mutations viz. codon 8/9 (+G) (c.27_28insG) and HbE (codon 26 G-A) (c.79G>A) exhibited a very low frequency of occurrence, whereas the IVS-1-1 (G-T) (IVS1+1G>T) and the 619 bp deletion (c.366_494del) mutations were absent. We also identified certain rare mutations during the diagnostic evaluation. Gene sequencing confirmed the codon 30 (G-C) (c.92G>C) mutation and the rare codon 5 (-CT) (c.17_18delCT) and IVS-II-837 (T-G) (IVSII-14T>G) mutations. This is the first report of the IVS II 837 mutation in the Indian population. We also report a novel diagnostic application during RDB-based screening for the detection of the (c.92G>C) mutations. Such a comprehensive mutation screening is essential for prenatal diagnosis of β-thalassemia and control of this highly prevalent monogenic disorder in the Indian population.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
Agarwal S, Hattori Y, Agarwal SS (2000) Rare beta-thalassemia mutations in Asian Indians. Am J Hematol 65:322–323
Agarwal S, Gupta A, Gupta UR, Sarwai S, Phadke S, Agarwal SS (2003) Prenatal diagnosis in β-thalassemia: an Indian experience. Fetal Diagn Ther 18:328–332
Cai SP, Wall J, Kan YW, Chehab FF (1994) Reverse dot blot probes for the screening of β-thalassemia mutations in Asians and American blacks. Hum Mutat 3:59–63
Dastidar DG, Dutta RN, Gupta P, Old JM (1994) Detection of β-thalassemia in eastern Indian population by polymerase chain reaction. Ind J Med Res 100:111–114
Garewal G, Fearon CW, Warren TC, Marwah N, Marwah RK, Mahadik C, Kazazian JJ Jr (1994) The molecular basis of β-thalassemia in Punjab and Maharastrian Indians indicates a multilocus etiology involving triplicated β-globin loci. Br J Haematol 86:372–376
Gupta A, Hattori Y, Gupta UR, Sarwai S, Nigam N, Singhal P, Agarwal S (2003) Molecular genetic testing of beta-thalassemia patients of Indian origin and a novel 8-bp deletion mutation at codons 36/37/38/39. Genet Test Summer 7:163–168
Gurgey A, Becsac S, Mesci L, Cakar N, Karakas U, Kutlar A, Altay C (1993) Prenatal diagnosis of sickle cell anemia using PCR and restriction enzyme Dde I. Turk J Pediatr 35:159–162
Kukreti R, Dash D, E VK, Chakravarty S, Das SK, De M, Talukder G (2002) Spectrum of β-thalassemia mutations and their association with allelic sequence polymorphisms at the β-globin gene cluster in an Eastern Indian population. J Hematol 70:269–277
Maggio A, Giambona A, Cai SP, Wall J, Kan YW, Chehab FF (1993) Rapid and simultaneous typing of hemoglobin S, hemoglobin C, and seven Mediterranean β-thalassemia mutations by covalent reverse dot-blot analysis: application to prenatal diagnosis in Sicily. Blood 81:239–242
Miller SA, Dykes DD, Polesky HF (1988) A simple salting out procedure for extracting DNA from human nucleated cells. Nucleic Acids Res 16:1215
Newton CR, Graham A, Heptinstall LE, Powell SJ, Summers C, Kalshekar N, Smith JC, Markham AF (1989) The amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS). Nucleic Acids Res 17:2503–2516
Old JM (1986) In: Davies KE (ed) Genetic analysis of the human disease: a practical approach. IRL, Oxford, pp 1–17
Old JM, Varawalla NY, Weatherall DJ (1990) Rapid detection and prenatal diagnosis of β-thalassaemia: studies in Indian and Cypriot populations in the UK. Lancet 33:834–837
Varawalla NY, Old JM, Sarkar R, Venkatesan R, Weatherall DJ (1991a) The spectrum of β-thalassemia mutations on the Indian subcontinent: the basis for prenatal diagnosis. Br J Haematol 78:242–247
Varawalla NY, Old JM, Weatherall DJ (1991b) Rare beta-thalassaemia mutations in Asian Indians. Br J Haematol 79:640–644
Verma IC (1994) The challenge of genetic disorders in India. In: Molecular genetics and gene therapy—the new frontier. Scientific Communications, Amsterdam, pp 11–20
Verma IC, Saxena R, Thomas E, Jain PK (1997) Regional distribution of β-thalassemia mutations in India. Hum Genet 100:109–113
Acknowledgements
We thank all physicians and hospitals of AP and other states for sending to us patients or blood samples for this study. We also thank the families of the patients for their cooperation. This work was supported by a Core Grant from the Department of Biotechnology, Government of India, to the CDFD, Hyderabad.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Bashyam, M.D., Bashyam, L., Savithri, G.R. et al. Molecular genetic analyses of β-thalassemia in South India reveals rare mutations in the β-globin gene. J Hum Genet 49, 408–413 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10038-004-0169-9
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10038-004-0169-9
Keywords
This article is cited by
-
Evaluation of β-Thalassaemia Cases for Common Mutations in Western Rajasthan
Indian Journal of Hematology and Blood Transfusion (2021)
-
Economic Burden of Transfusion Dependent Thalassemia
The Indian Journal of Pediatrics (2018)
-
A descriptive profile of β-thalassaemia mutations in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka
Journal of Community Genetics (2010)
-
Profiling β-thalassaemia mutations in India at state and regional levels: implications for genetic education, screening and counselling programmes
The HUGO Journal (2009)
-
Farber lipogranulomatosis: clinical and molecular genetic analysis reveals a novel mutation in an Indian family
Journal of Human Genetics (2006)