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Author Notes:

Address for correspondence: Dr. Rashna Sam Dastur, Centre for Advanced Molecular Diagnostics in Neuromuscular Disorders, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. E‑mail: rdastur@hotmail.com

Special thanks are due to Dr. Sasikumar K. Menon, Assistant Director, TDM Labs Mumbai for providing the infrastructural facilities and Ms. Mugdha Devalkar, Research Fellow, for her assistance in the project work.

There are no conflicts of interest.

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Research Funding:

The study was entirely funded by the Jain Foundation, Seattle, USA.

Keywords:

  • Dysferlinopathy
  • limb-girdle muscular dystrophy
  • monocyte-assay
  • next-generation sequencing

Detection of Dysferlin Gene Pathogenic Variants in the Indian Population in Patients Predicted to have a Dysferlinopathy Using a Blood-based Monocyte Assay and Clinical Algorithm: A Model for Accurate and Cost-effective Diagnosis.

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Journal Title:

Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology

Volume:

Volume 20, Number 3

Publisher:

, Pages 302-308

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) is the most common adult-onset class of muscular dystrophies in India, but a majority of suspected LGMDs in India remain unclassified to the genetic subtype level. The next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based approaches have allowed molecular characterization and subtype diagnosis in a majority of these patients in India. MATERIALS AND METHODS: (I) To select probable dysferlinopathy (LGMD2B) cases from other LGMD subtypes using two screening methods (i) to determine the status of dysferlin protein expression in blood (peripheral blood mononuclear cell) by monocyte assay (ii) using a predictive algorithm called automated LGMD diagnostic assistant (ALDA) to obtain possible LGMD subtypes based on clinical symptoms. (II) Identification of gene pathogenic variants by NGS for 34 genes associated with LGMD or LGMD like muscular dystrophies, in cases showing: absence of dysferlin protein by the monocyte assay and/or a typical dysferlinopathy phenotype, with medium to high predictive scores using the ALDA tool. RESULTS: Out of the 125 patients screened by NGS, 96 were confirmed with two dysferlin variants, of which 84 were homozygous. Single dysferlin pathogenic variants were seen in 4 patients, whereas 25 showed no variants in the dysferlin gene. CONCLUSION: In this study, 98.2% of patients with absence of the dysferlin protein showed one or more variants in the dysferlin gene and hence has a high predictive significance in diagnosing dysferlinopathies. However, collection of blood samples from all over India for protein analysis is expensive. Our analysis shows that the use of the "ALDA tool" could be a cost-effective alternative method. Identification of dysferlin pathogenic variants by NGS is the ultimate method for diagnosing dysferlinopathies though follow-up with the monocyte assay can be useful to understand the phenotype in relation to the dysferlin protein expression and also be a useful biomarker for future clinical trials.

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© 2006 - 2017 Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).

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