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INVESTIGATIVE REPORT
Genotype–Phenotype Correlations of Dystrophic Epidermolysis
Bullosa in India: Experience from a Tertiary Care Centre
Vamsi K. YENAMANDRA 1 , Shamsudheen K. VELLARIKKAL 2,3 , Madhumita R. CHOWDHURY 4 , Rijith JAYARAJAN 2 , Ankit VERMA 2 ,
Vinod SCARIA 2,3 , Sridhar SIVASUBBU 2,3 , Subrata BASU RAY 5 , Amit K. DINDA 6 , Madhulika KABRA 4 , Vinod K. SHARMA 1 and
Gomathy SETHURAMAN 1
Departments of 1 Dermatology & Venereology, 4 Pediatrics, 5 Anatomy and 6 Pathology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, 2 CSIR-Institute
of Genomics & Integrative Biology, New Delhi, and 3 Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research, Council of Scientific and Industrial
Research (CSIR), New Delhi, India
Recent advances in the field of genomics have seen the
successful implementation of whole exome sequencing
as a rapid and efficient diagnostic strategy in several
genodermatoses. The aim of this study was to explore
the potential of molecular studies in dystrophic epider-
molysis bullosa (DEB) in India. Whole exome sequen-
cing was performed using genomic DNA from each
case of epidermolysis bullosa, followed by massively
parallel sequencing. Resulting reads were mapped to
the human reference genome hg19. Sanger sequen-
cing subsequently confirmed the potentially pathoge-
nic mutations. Whole exome sequencing of 18 patients
with DEB from 17 unrelated Indian families revealed
20 distinct sequence variants in the COL7A1 gene in-
cluding 2 widely prevalent mutations. Dominant inhe-
ritance was seen in 7 patients, while 11 patients sho-
wed a highly variable recessive DEB. This preliminary
study using exome sequencing is clearly encouraging
and will serve as the basis for future large-scale mole-
cular studies to actively identify and understand DEB
in the Indian population.
Key words: dystrophic EB; collagen VII; whole exome sequen-
cing.
Accepted Mar 27, 2018; Epub ahead of print Mar 27, 2018
Acta Derm Venereol 2018; 98: 873–879.
Corr: Gomathy Sethuraman, Department of Dermatology, All India In-
stitute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi-110029, India. E-mail: kgsethu@
yahoo.com/[email protected] and Sridhar Sivasubbu, CSIR-Institute
of Genomics & Integrative Biology, Mathura Road, New Delhi, India. E-
mail: [email protected]
D
ystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DEB) is a rare ge-
netic skin disease characterized by trauma-induced
muco-cutaneous blistering associated with scarring,
milia and nail dystrophy. Depending on the mode of
inheritance, DEB is categorized into dominant (DDEB)
and recessive (RDEB) forms that are further divided into
many sub-types based on clinical presentation. All sub-
types are associated with mutations in the COL7A1 gene
encoding type VII collagen, a major stabilizing molecule
of the dermoepidermal junction (DEJ) (1).
Despite well-characterized genetic studies from dif-
ferent ethnic backgrounds, identifying several recurrent
and region-specific mutations, molecular diagnosis of
DEB is still challenging. This is because most patients
SIGNIFICANCE
Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa is a rare and devastating
genetic skin disease associated with many complications
including skin cancer. In the absence of a cure, making an
accurate genetic diagnosis is therapeutic in its own right
to the patients and their families as it potentially bene-
fits them in terms of management and counseling. To this
extent, this study provides an insight into the mutational
spectrum of a small group of Indian patients with dystrophic
epidermolysis bullosa and also stresses the advantage of
next generation DNA sequencing technologies in aiding the
accurate diagnosis of patients with epidermolysis bullosa.
harbour mutations that tend to be family specific, as
evident from the large repertoire of variations identified
across the entire COL7A1 gene, spanning 118 exons. To
make it more complex, wide phenotypic heterogeneity is
also observed across the different sub-types of DEB, with
multiple mutations resulting in a similar phenotype, and
the same mutation showing variable clinical presenta-
tions, in addition to considerable inter- and intra-familial
variations (2, 3).
Prior to the advent of next-generation DNA sequen-
cing (NGS) technologies, molecular diagnosis of DEB
was based on traditional Sanger sequencing of either the
hot-spot regions or the entire COL7A1 gene, requiring
more than 70 primer sets; a process that is tedious, time
consuming and expensive (4). Due to its high throughput
nature and ability to simultaneously sequence multiple
genes, NGS, especially whole exome sequencing (WES),
has revolutionized the molecular approach and provided
a fast and efficient diagnostic strategy in several genoder-
matoses (4, 5). In view of the scarcity of, and need for,
molecular studies for DEB in India, the aim of this study
was to explore the potential of WES in the phenotype
and genotype characterization of patients with DEB, as
part of a larger effort in understanding the mutational
spectrum of patients with EB in India.
METHODS
Study participants
In this study, 18 consecutive patients (PT01–PT18) from 17 unrela-
ted Indian families, clinically diagnosed with DEB, were recruited
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license. www.medicaljournals.se/acta
Journal Compilation © 2018 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.
doi: 10.2340/00015555-2929
Acta Derm Venereol 2018; 98: 873–879