z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Effect of SNPs in BCL11A gene on the clinical heterogeneity of patients with HbE/beta-Thalassemia in Bangladesh
Author(s) -
Subarna Sayed Ety,
Farjana Akther Noor,
M. Pear Hossain,
Suprovath Kumar Sarker,
Syed Saleheen Qadri,
Kaiissar Mannoor
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science proceedings series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2663-9467
pISSN - 2663-9459
DOI - 10.31580/sps.v2i1.1291
Subject(s) - medicine , fetal hemoglobin , beta thalassemia , single nucleotide polymorphism , gastroenterology , thalassemia , hemoglobin e , alpha thalassemia , genotype , gene , biology , genetics , fetus , pregnancy
Hemoglobin E/beta-thalassemia is a blood disorder with highly variable clinical phenotypes related to increased production of fetal hemoglobin (HbF), which can influence the degree of severity in beta-thalassemia. The aim of this study was to find out the disease modifying effects of two SNPs, rs-4671393 & rs-11886868 in BCL11A gene among HbE/beta-thalassemia patients. A total of 133 HbE/beta-thalassemia patients with mean of age 19.66 ± 10.22 years and 50 healthy controls with completely normal hematological parameters were recruited in this study and patients were classified as NTD/mild, moderate and severe, according to previously reported clinical scoring system. All the samples were subjected to Complete Blood Count analysis and Hemoglobin Electrophoresis. For SNP detection, Real-time PCR-based High Resolution Melt-Curve Analysis and Sanger Sequencing were performed. Statistical analysis including two-tailed unpaired T-test, one-way ANOVA test and Pearson Correlation were done using ‘Graphpad Prism version 7’. The allelic distribution of rs-4671393 in the BCL11A gene was 78.2% GG and 21.8% AG and for rs-11886868, there were 51.12% CC and 48.9% CT+TT. Both SNPs showed significant association with clinical severity score and induction of HbF (g/dl) (p= 0.03 and p= 0.02) in HbE/beta-thalassemia patients. In addition, HbF level was significantly higher (p<0.0001) in NTD/mildly severe group compared to other two groups having significant correlation with transfusion interval (r= 0.5) and clinical score (r= -0.45), while showed comparatively less correlation with the age of first blood transfusion (r= 0.32). Nevertheless, having both SNPs (17% minor allele for rs-4671393 and 25% minor allele for rs-11886868), no induction of HbF was found among SNP positive healthy individuals. The SNPs of BCL11A, rs-11886868 and rs-4671393 have significant effects on both HbF and clinical score in HbE/beta-thalassemia patients. However, any of the two SNPs showed no HbF inductive effect in the absence of anemic condition.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here