TY - JOUR
T1 - Bardet-Biedl syndrome type 3 in an Iranian family
T2 - Clinical study and confirmation of disease localization
AU - Ghadami, Mohsen
AU - Tomita, Hiro Aki
AU - Najafi, Mohammad Taghi
AU - Damavandi, Elia
AU - Farahvash, Mohammad Sadegh
AU - Yamada, Koki
AU - Majidzadeh-A, Keyvan
AU - Niikawa, Norio
PY - 2000/10/23
Y1 - 2000/10/23
N2 - Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a group of autosomal recessive MCA/MR syndromes characterized by pigmentary retinopathy, postaxial polydactyly, hypogenitalism, obesity, and mental retardation. Five BBS loci have been identified; among them, BBS type 1 (BBS1) and type 3 (BBS3) are most common and most rare, respectively. We encountered an Iranian family that had seven affected members. All patients had a history of mild to severe obesity, but it was reversible in some patients by caloric restriction and exercise. All patients had pigmentary retinopathy, beginning as night blindness in early childhood and progressing toward severe impairment of vision by the end of the second decade. Polydactyly varied in limb distribution, ranging from four-limb involvement to random involvement or even to nonaffectedness. Six of the seven patients were not mentally retarded. Although kidney anomaly or an adrenal mass was present in two patients, the fact that one patient had seven children rules out reproductive dysfunction. Linkage analysis with microsatellite markers showed that the disease in the family was assigned to a region around marker loci at 3p13-p12 (maximum LOD score = 4.15 and recombination fraction θ = 0, at D3S1603 microsatellite marker), to which the BBS3 locus has been mapped. Haplotype analysis did not reduce the extent of the previously reported critical region of BBS3. A comparison of clinical manifestations of our patients with those of previously reported BBS3 patients did not support any type-specific phenotypes, though manifestations in our patients are similar to those in BBS3 patients of a family in Newfoundland. (C) 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
AB - Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a group of autosomal recessive MCA/MR syndromes characterized by pigmentary retinopathy, postaxial polydactyly, hypogenitalism, obesity, and mental retardation. Five BBS loci have been identified; among them, BBS type 1 (BBS1) and type 3 (BBS3) are most common and most rare, respectively. We encountered an Iranian family that had seven affected members. All patients had a history of mild to severe obesity, but it was reversible in some patients by caloric restriction and exercise. All patients had pigmentary retinopathy, beginning as night blindness in early childhood and progressing toward severe impairment of vision by the end of the second decade. Polydactyly varied in limb distribution, ranging from four-limb involvement to random involvement or even to nonaffectedness. Six of the seven patients were not mentally retarded. Although kidney anomaly or an adrenal mass was present in two patients, the fact that one patient had seven children rules out reproductive dysfunction. Linkage analysis with microsatellite markers showed that the disease in the family was assigned to a region around marker loci at 3p13-p12 (maximum LOD score = 4.15 and recombination fraction θ = 0, at D3S1603 microsatellite marker), to which the BBS3 locus has been mapped. Haplotype analysis did not reduce the extent of the previously reported critical region of BBS3. A comparison of clinical manifestations of our patients with those of previously reported BBS3 patients did not support any type-specific phenotypes, though manifestations in our patients are similar to those in BBS3 patients of a family in Newfoundland. (C) 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
KW - Autosomal recessive
KW - Bardet-Biedl syndrome type 3
KW - Iranian family
KW - Linkage analysis
KW - Mental retardation
KW - Obesity
KW - Pigmentary retinopathy
KW - Polydactyly, hypogenitalism
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U2 - 10.1002/1096-8628(20001023)94:5<433::AID-AJMG17>3.0.CO;2-X
DO - 10.1002/1096-8628(20001023)94:5<433::AID-AJMG17>3.0.CO;2-X
M3 - Article
C2 - 11050632
AN - SCOPUS:0034706395
SN - 1552-4825
VL - 94
SP - 433
EP - 437
JO - American Journal of Medical Genetics, Part A
JF - American Journal of Medical Genetics, Part A
IS - 5
ER -