Meta Gene 15 (2018) 27–30
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Meta Gene
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/mgene
Frequency of SMN1 exon 7 deletion in patients with spinal muscular atrophy
in Kashmir
MARK
Shafia Syed, Mahrukh H. Zargar⁎, Arshad Pandith, Nabeela Khan, Rehana Ahmad,
Qurteeba Mahajan, Wardha Qazi
Advanced Centre for Human Genetics, Sher-I-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, Srinagar, J & K 190011, India
A R T I C L E I N F O
A B S T R A C T
Keywords:
Kashmir
Spinal muscular atrophy
Survival motor neuron
Deletion
Objective: Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive neuronal disorder resulting from degeneration of spinal motor neurons. Survival motor neuron (SMN) gene is the disease determining gene of SMA. In
the present study molecular analysis was performed in 85 SMA patients as compared to 100 healthy controls
from Kashmiri population.
Method: The deletion in telomeric exon 7 of SMN1 gene was analysed in 85 SMA cases and 100 healthy controls
by allele specific PCR followed by agarose gel electrophoresis.
Result: The frequency of telomeric exon 7 deletion was 42.35% (36 of 85) in total SMA patients; 32 out of 61
SMA type I cases, 2 out of 13 type II SMA cases, 1 out of 6 type III cases and 1 out of 5 type IV SMA cases.
Moreover the consanguinity was found in 57.64% of SMA patients. In healthy controls deletion was not found in
any samples.
Conclusion: There is a significant association of SMN1 homozygous exon 7 deletion and the occurance of SMA as
compared to healthy controls. Although the frequency of SMN1 homozygous deletion in Kashmiri population is
lower than the rest of the countries but we conclude the presence of exon 7 deletion in clinically suspected SMA
patient should be treated as confirmation of diagnosis and therefore this test can be used as one of the useful tool
for SMA diagnosis.
1. Introduction
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most common autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder and the second most common fatal
autosomal recessive disorder after cystic fibrosis. With a worldwide
incidence of 1/6000 to 1/10000 births and the carrier frequency of 1/
50, it is the leading genetic cause of infant death globally (Roberts
et al., 1970; Pearn, 1978; Czeizel and Hamula, 1989). Clinically, SMA is
characterised by the progressive loss of alpha motor neurons in spinal
cord anterior horn cells, leading to progressive proximal and symmetrical limb and trunk muscle weakness along with muscular atrophy.
The routine activities such as walking, sitting up, crawling and controlling head movement are compromised. In more severe cases the
muscles involved in breathing and swallowing are also involved. Poor
muscle tone in SMA patients has been also associated with contractures
and broken bones in children (Dubowitz, 1978).
Depending upon the age of onset of symptoms, motor development
milestones, severity of muscle weakness SMA has been categorised into
four clinical subtypes by International SMA Consortium classification.
⁎
The most common and severe type is Type I SMA (Werdnig-Hoffmann I
disease). This type has onset within first 6 months of life and the patients are not able to sit. Patients usually do not live past two years of
age with severe respiratory distress being the most common cause of
death. The type II SMA (also known as Dubowitz disease), is an intermediate form and symptoms usually has an onset from 6 months upto
2 yrs. of life. In this form of SMA children can sit up but still develop
progressive muscle weakness and can never stand or walk on their own.
The type III SMA (also called Kugelberg-Welander disease) has a
chronic evolution and the symptoms appear after 2 yrs. of life. These
patients are able to stand and walk unaided at least for some time in
infancy but many later loose this ability. The type IV SMA (adult form)
has an onset after 30 yrs. of life. The symptoms are mildest of all the
forms and it mainly affects the proximal muscles of the extremities. The
symptoms start gradually in adulthood with normal longevity (Zerrres
and Davies, 1998).
SMA has been frequently associated with a gene known as survival
motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene which is responsible for the production of
a SMN protein. The SMN protein is essential for the maintenance of
Corresponding author at: Advanced Centre for Human Genetics, Sher-I-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir 190011, India.
E-mail address: mhameedz@gmail.com (M.H. Zargar).
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mgene.2017.10.005
Received 14 August 2017; Received in revised form 18 October 2017; Accepted 25 October 2017
2214-5400/ © 2017 Published by Elsevier B.V.
Meta Gene 15 (2018) 27–30
S. Syed et al.
Table 1
Frequency of SMN1 homozygous exon 7 deletion in different populations.
Country
No of Patients
SMN1 EXON 7 deletion
[Reference]
Korea; 2001
Vietnam; 2003
South Africa(Johannesburg); 2007
Egypt; 2001
Russia; 2001
Brasilia; 1999
Algerian; 2009
India; 2005
Saudi Arabia; 1997
Morocco; 2003
Turkey; 2000
Germany; 1995
Spain; 1995
Holland; 1995
Japan; 2002
Tunis; 2006
Iran; 2004
UK; 1995
Kuwait; 2001
France; 1995
Taiwan; 1995
37
17
92
33
57
87
92
45
16
54
60
195
54
103
32
60
22
140
46
229
42
32%
41%
51%
55%
65%
69%
75%
76%
82%
83%
85%
90%
91%
93%
94%
95%
95%
97%
97%
98%
100%
Cho et al. (2001)
Duc Bach et al. (2003)
Labrum et al. (2007)
Shawky et al. (2001)
Glotov et al. (2001)
Kim et al. (1999)
Sifi et al. (2013)
Kesari et al. (2005)
Al Rajeh et al. (1998)
Bouhouche et al. (2003)
Savas et al. (2000)
Wirth et al. (1995)
Bussaglia et al. (1995)
Cobben et al. (1995)
Akutsu et al. (2002)
M'rad et al. (2006)
Shafeghati et al. (2004)
Rodrigues et al. (1995)
Haider et al. (2001)
Lefebvre et al. (1995)
Tsai et al. (2001)
both the inpatient and outpatient services from the Department of
Neurology and Department of Paediatrics, Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of
Medical Sciences Hospital and GB Panth Paediatrics Hospital in
Kashmir. Data from all SMA patients was obtained from clinical examinations of patients and/or interviews with guardians. The study was
approved by the ethics committee of the institute and all the patients/
guardians (in case of minors) and controls gave informed consent to
participate in the study.
specialised nerve cells called motor neurons. The SMN gene has been
mapped to chromsomome 5q13.2. It contains 9 exons and encodes 294
aa protein. There are two highly identical copies of this gene: telomeric
SMN1 and centromeric SMN2. Both share 99.8% sequence homology
with only five nucleotide differences, one in intron 6, one in exon 7, two
in intron 7, and one in exon 8 (Melki et al., 1990). These subtle differences do not alter the amino acids sequence, but it has an effect on
mRNA splicing. The SMN1 transcript includes the exon 7 and produces
a full-length and stable protein while SMN2 excludes the exon 7 and
results in loss of a chunk of protein (Lorson and Androphy, 2000). The
majority of SMN protein is produced by SMN1 gene and a small amount
produced by the SMN2 gene. SMA phenotype is a result of SMN1 gene
dysfunction. The SMN2 gene copy number affects the disease severity
only because of the insufficient amount of protein produced by SMN2
gene as it excludes the exon 7.
Several studies have shown a vast majority of SMA patients having
the homozygous deletion in exon 7 in SMN1 gene but with varied frequency in different populations (Table 1) (Cho et al., 2001; Duc Bach
et al., 2003; Labrum et al., 2007; Shawky et al., 2001; Glotov et al.,
2001; Kim et al., 1999; Sifi et al., 2013; Kesari et al., 2005; Al Rajeh
et al., 1998; Bouhouche et al., 2003; Savas et al., 2000; Wirth et al.,
1995; Bussaglia et al., 1995; Cobben et al., 1995; Akutsu et al., 2002;
M'rad et al., 2006; Shafeghati et al., 2004; Rodrigues et al., 1995;
Haider et al., 2001; Lefebvre et al., 1995; Tsai et al., 2001). The SMN1
exon 7 deletion has been reported to be more prevalent among Spain,
Holland, Japan, Tunis, Iran, UK, Kuwait, France and Taiwan with frequencies of > 90%, although lower frequencies have been found in
Korea, Vietnam, Egypt and Johannesburg. Keeping in view the varied
results of SMN1 exon 7 deletion in SMA patients across different populations, the present study has been undertaken to study the frequency
of SMN1 exon 7 deletion in Kashmiri SMA cases.
2.2. Sample collection and DNA extraction
About 2–3 mL of peripheral blood was collected from SMA patients
and healthy controls in tubes containing ethylenediamine tetraacetic
acid (EDTA) and DNA was isolated using a Zymogen (Irvine, CA, USA)
DNA extraction kit. The quality of the DNA was checked by agarose gel
electrophoresis. The extracted DNA was stored at − 20 °C for further
use.
2.3. Mutation detection
Allele specific PCR was used to detect exon 7 deletion in SMN1 gene
using the primers described previously (Feldkötter et al., 2002). The
primers specifically amplify exon7 of SMN1 gene and not SMN2 gene.
To monitor the efficiency of PCR reaction, an internal control for the
PCR was used. A control primers pair AAT1/2 was used to amplify a
fragment of exon V of α1-antitrypsin gene (Newton et al., 1989). The
primer sequences are given in Table 2. The PCR reaction was set in a
final volume of 25 μl mixture containing 1× PCR buffer (Biotools),
0.2 mM dNTP mixture (biotools), 150 ng each primer (Sigma), 1 U Taq
DNA polymerase (Biotools 5 U/μl), and 200 ng genomic DNA (0.2 μg/
μl). Amplification was done at 94 for 7 min, 30 cycles of 94 °C for 30 s,
58.5 °C for 30 s min, 72 °C for 30 s min followed by extension at 72 °C
for 7 min. The PCR product was directly visualised under UV light after
electrophoresis using 2–3% agarose gel (Genie, Bangalore, India). The
PCR product of SMN1 was visualised at the corresponding size of
307 bp, while that of internal control AAT1/2 at 220 bp (Fig. 1).
2. Materials and methods
2.1. Study population
A total of 85 SMA patients and 100 healthy controls from the
Kashmiri population were included in the present study. The patient
diagnosis was made in accordance with the guidelines set by the
International SMA Consortium. The clinical classification of patients
into four groups was done based on criteria given by International SMA
Consortium (Zerrres and Davies, 1998). The patients were selected from
3. Result
A total of 85 SMA patients and 100 healthy controls were studied for
SMN1 exon 7 deletion from Kashmiri population. Of the 85 SMA patients, 61 cases were classified as type I SMA, 13 as type II SMA, 6 as
28
Meta Gene 15 (2018) 27–30
S. Syed et al.
Table 2
Primers used for the PCR amplification.
Gene
SMN1
telSMNex7forw
telSMNint7rev
α1 antitypsin
AATI
AAT2
M
1
2
3
4
Primer sequence
Amplicon size
5′-TTTATTTTCCTTACAGGGTTTC-3′
5′-GTGAAAGTATGTTTCTTCCACGTA-3’
307 bp
5’-TGTCCACGTGAGCCTTGCTCGAGGCCTGG-3′
5′-GAGACTTGGTATTTTGTTCAATCATTAAG-3’
220 bp
5
(Table 3).The mutation was present in 32 out of 61 type I SMA cases, 2
out of 13 type II SMA cases, 1 out of 6 type III SMA cases and 1 out of 5
type IV SMA cases (Table 4). The overall frequency of consanguineous
marriages was 57.64%; 55.29% for 1st degree consanguineous marriages, 2.35% for 2nd degree consanguineous marriages and 42.35% for
non-consanguineous marriages (Table 5).
4. Discussion
SMA is a degenerative neuronal disease which has been associated
with SMN gene. SMN gene has two nearly identical forms in humans,
SMN1 and SMN2. The main difference between SMN1 and SMN2 gene
is found in exon 7, which is critical for fully functional protein production. A single nucleotide change in the exon 7 (C in SMN1 and T in
SMN2) is important for SMN RNA splicing. The resulting SMN1 mRNA
includes exon 7 and produces a full length protein whereas the SMN2
mRNA excludes exon 7 and produces truncated protein (Melki et al.,
1990; Lorson and Androphy, 2000). In SMA patients, a defect in SMN1
gene makes it unable to code for the SMN protein resulting in death of
motor neuron cells. The defect is either a deletion occurring at exon 7 or
due to other rare mutations. The homozygous exon 7 deletion in the
SMN1 gene has been found in the majority of SMA patients in many
studies (Table 1).
In this study we analysed the homozygous SMN1 exon 7 deletion in
85 SMA affected patients as compared to 100 healthy controls from
Kashmiri population. We found the deletions involving exon 7 were
present in 42.35% of SMA patients and absent in all healthy controls
(p < 0.0001). There was a higher frequency of homozygous deletion
of SMN1 exon 7 in SMA type I cases (52.45%) than in type II, III & IV
cases (15.38%, 16.66% and 20% respectively). In our study a lower
frequency of SMN1 exon 7 deletion was observed than most of the
earlier studies. Previously a lower frequency of exon 7 deletion was also
observed among SMA population in Korea, Vietnam, Egypt and
Johhanesburg (Cho et al., 2001; Duc Bach et al., 2003; Labrum et al.,
2007; Shawky et al., 2001). In Vietnamese population the homozygous
SMN1 deletion was found in 7 of 17 (41.17%) SMA patients (Duc Bach
et al., 2003). In South African Black population SMN1 exon deletion
was found in 51% (42 of 92) patients with SMA (Labrum et al., 2007).
In Egyptian population, Shawky et al., has reported SMN1 exon 7 deletion to be present only 55% of cases studied (Shawky et al., 2001).
Comparatively the SMN1 homozygous exon 7 deletion was higher in
most of the studies conducted in other populations across the globe
with frequencies > 90% (Table 1). This variability in the frequency of
SMN1 exon 7 deletion in different populations could be explained by
the fact that ethnic and geographic variations play an important role in
the etiology of genetic diseases.
In addition to exon 7 deletion the role of other mutations present in
SMN1 gene in the pathogenesis of SMA cannot be excluded. Earlier
some SMA cases have been found to be caused by other compound
mutations, where one allele of SMN1 gene has exon 7 deletion and
other allele has a subtle mutation. The studies have shown that the
patients with these subtle mutations have significantly reduced SMN
transcript levels which were comparable to those seen in patients with a
homozygous deletion of SMN1 (Qu et al., 2012; Tiziano et al., 2010),
thereby resulting in SMA.
Fig. 1. Representative gel picture showing SMN1 amplicon at 307 bp and AAT1/2 amplicon at 220 bp.
Lane M contains 100 bp DNA molecular weight marker.
Lane 1,3 & 4 represents samples with non-deletion- having two bands at 220 bp
+ 307 bp.
Lane 2 & 5 show samples with deletion having band only at 220 bp.
Table 3
The frequency of homozygous SMN1 exon 7 deletion among SMA patients and healthy
controls.
Group
No
SMN exon 7 deletion
P value
Healthy Control
SMA Patients
100
85
0
36
< 0.0001
Table 4
Frequency of homozygous SMN1 exon 7 deletion among Kashmiri SMA patients.
Type I
Type II
Type III
Type IV
Total
No of patients
No of patients with SMN1 exon 7 deletion
61
13
6
5
85
32(52.45%)
2 (15.38%)
1(16.66%)
1(20%)
36(42.35%)
Table 5
Frequency of Consanguinity in SMA patients.
Degree of interbreeding
No of patients
Ist Degree
2nd Degree
Total Consanguinity
Unrelated
47 (55.29%)
2 (2.35%)
49(57.64%)
36 (42.35%)
type III SMA and 5 as type IV SMA according to their medical history. In
healthy controls the homozygous exon 7 deletion was not found in any
of the samples. While in SMA cases the deletion was found in 42.35% of
total SMA patients. A significant association was found between the
homozygous exon 7 deletion and the occurance of SMA (p ≤ 0.0001)
29
Meta Gene 15 (2018) 27–30
S. Syed et al.
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In our study we found the rate of consanguinity was 57.64% in
overall SMA cases. Most of the marriages in our region (Kashmir) are of
consanguineous nature because of the cultural, social and religious
background which has made Kashmiri population ethnically conserved
through generations. As consanguinity is an important factor that
contributes to the increased incidence of autosomal recessive disorder,
the current data highlights the need for lowering the consanguineous
marriages and the value of genetic counselling in such marriages to
lower the prevalence of SMA in our Kashmiri population.
Although the frequency of exon 7 deletion was lower in our SMA
population than other populations, we suggest this test should be recommended to all suspected SMA patients before considering other
invasive procedures like muscle biopsy and also to verify whether a
patient has SMA or a different disorder that has phenotypical similarities. We conclude that the presence of a homozygous deletion in SMN
exon 7 in a patient with clinically presumed SMA should be treated as
confirmation of diagnosis, however a strongly suspected patient should
be screened for other mutation in SMN1 gene as well. Currently as SMA
has no treatment available, with the availability of genetic testing for
SMA, an early diagnosis and appropriate genetic counselling to such
families can be provided to decrease the risk of disease in future
pregnancies.
Acknowledgements
This research was financially supported by the Sher-I-Kashmir
Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Kashmir.
Conflict of interest
None declared.
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