AI Article Synopsis

  • Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a genetic condition that leads to retinal degeneration along with issues like obesity, intellectual disability, and kidney disease, but can also present milder symptoms in some patients.
  • A case study of an Israeli patient with a mild form of retinal disease showed additional issues like epilepsy and dental problems, linking them to a specific genetic variant in a gene that's critical for vision.
  • The study suggests that this genetic variant may cause a less severe form of BBS, indicating that genetic testing for this variant should be considered not just for BBS patients, but also for those with milder retinal diseases.

Article Abstract

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS), one of the most common forms of syndromic inherited retinal diseases (IRDs), is characterized by the combination of retinal degeneration with additional extra-ocular manifestations, including obesity, intellectual disability, kidney disease, polydactyly and other skeletal abnormalities. We observed an Israeli patient with autosomal recessive apparently non-syndromic rod-cone dystrophy (RCD). Extra-ocular findings were limited to epilepsy and dental problems. Genetic analysis with a single molecule molecular inversion probes-based panel that targets the exons and splice sites of 113 genes associated with retinitis pigmentosa and Leber congenital amaurosis revealed a homozygous rare missense variant in the gene (c.263C>T;p.(Ser88Leu)). This variant, which affects a highly conserved amino acid, is also located in the last base of Exon 3, and predicted to be splice-altering. An in vitro minigene splice assay demonstrated that this variant leads to the partial aberrant splicing of Exon 3. Therefore, we suggest that this variant is likely hypomorphic. This is in agreement with the relatively mild phenotype observed in the patient. Hence, the findings in our study expand the phenotypic spectrum associated with variants and indicate that variants in this gene should be considered not only in BBS patients but also in individuals with non-syndromic IRD or IRD with very mild extra-ocular manifestations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10969354PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cimb46030163DOI Listing

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