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Dive into the research topics where Pooja Biswas is active.

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Featured researches published by Pooja Biswas.


Genomics | 2014

exomeSuite: Whole exome sequence variant filtering tool for rapid identification of putative disease causing SNVs/indels

Bruno Maranhao; Pooja Biswas; Jacque L. Duncan; Kari Branham; Gabriel A. Silva; Muhammad Asif Naeem; S.N. Khan; S. Riazuddin; J. F. Hejtmancik; John R. Heckenlively; S.A. Riazuddin; Pauline Lee; Radha Ayyagari

Exome and whole-genome analyses powered by next-generation sequencing (NGS) have become invaluable tools in identifying causal mutations responsible for Mendelian disorders. Given that individual exomes contain several thousand single nucleotide variants and insertions/deletions, it remains a challenge to analyze large numbers of variants from multiple exomes to identify causal alleles associated with inherited conditions. To this end, we have developed user-friendly software that analyzes variant calls from multiple individuals to facilitate identification of causal mutations. The software, termed exomeSuite, filters for putative causative variants of monogenic diseases inherited in one of three forms: dominant, recessive caused by a homozygous variant, or recessive caused by two compound heterozygous variants. In addition, exomeSuite can perform homozygosity mapping and analyze the variant data of multiple unrelated individuals. Here we demonstrate that filtering of variants with exomeSuite reduces datasets to a fraction of a percent of their original size. To the best of our knowledge this is the first freely available software developed to analyze variant data from multiple individuals that rapidly assimilates and filters large data sets based on pattern of inheritance.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Investigating the Molecular Basis of Retinal Degeneration in a Familial Cohort of Pakistani Decent by Exome Sequencing.

Bruno Maranhao; Pooja Biswas; Alexander D. H. Gottsch; Mili Navani; Muhammad Asif Naeem; John Suk; Justin Chu; Sheen N. Khan; Rachel Poleman; Javed Akram; Sheikh Riazuddin; Pauline Lee; S. Amer Riazuddin; J. Fielding Hejtmancik; Radha Ayyagari

Purpose To define the molecular basis of retinal degeneration in consanguineous Pakistani pedigrees with early onset retinal degeneration. Methods A cohort of 277 individuals representing 26 pedigrees from the Punjab province of Pakistan was analyzed. Exomes were captured with commercial kits and sequenced on an Illumina HiSeq 2500. Candidate variants were identified using standard tools and analyzed using exomeSuite to detect all potentially pathogenic changes in genes implicated in retinal degeneration. Segregation analysis was performed by dideoxy sequencing and novel variants were additionally investigated for their presence in ethnicity-matched controls. Results We identified a total of nine causal mutations, including six novel variants in RPE65, LCA5, USH2A, CNGB1, FAM161A, CERKL and GUCY2D as the underlying cause of inherited retinal degenerations in 13 of 26 pedigrees. In addition to the causal variants, a total of 200 variants each observed in five or more unrelated pedigrees investigated in this study that were absent from the dbSNP, HapMap, 1000 Genomes, NHLBI ESP6500, and ExAC databases were identified, suggesting that they are common in, and unique to the Pakistani population. Conclusions We identified causal mutations associated with retinal degeneration in nearly half of the pedigrees investigated in this study through next generation whole exome sequencing. All novel variants detected in this study through exome sequencing have been cataloged providing a reference database of variants common in, and unique to the Pakistani population.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2014

Ocular Phenotype of a Family with FAM161A-associated Retinal Degeneration.

Jacque L. Duncan; Pooja Biswas; Igor Kozak; Mili Navani; Reema Syed; Shiri Soudry; Moreno Menghini; Rafael C. Caruso; Brett G. Jeffrey; John R. Heckenlively; G. Bhanuprakash Reddy; Pauline Lee; Austin Roorda; Radha Ayyagari

Abstract Background: Characterization of retinal degeneration (RD) using high-resolution retinal imaging and exome sequencing may identify phenotypic features that correspond with specific genetic defects. Materials and Methods: Six members from a non-consanguineous Indian family (three affected siblings, their asymptomatic parents and an asymptomatic child) were characterized clinically, using visual acuity, perimetry, full-field electroretinography (ERG), optical coherence tomography and cone structure as outcome measures. Cone photoreceptors were imaged in the proband using adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscopy. The exome was captured using Nimblegen SeqCap EZ V3.0 probes and sequenced using lllumina HiSeq. Reads were mapped to reference hg19. Confirmation of variants and segregation analysis was performed using dideoxy sequencing. Results: Analysis of exome variants using exomeSuite identified five homozygous variants in four genes known to be associated with RD. Further analysis revealed a homozygous nonsense mutation, c.1105 C > T, p.Arg335Ter, in the FAM161A gene segregating with RD. Three additional variants were found to occur at high frequency. Affected members showed a range of disease severity beginning at different ages, but all developed severe visual field and outer retinal loss. Conclusions: Exome analysis revealed a nonsense homozygous mutation in FAM161A segregating with RD with severe vision loss and a range of disease onset and progression. Loss of outer retinal structures demonstrated with high-resolution retinal imaging suggests FAM161A is important for normal photoreceptor structure and survival. Exome sequencing may identify causative genetic variants in autosomal recessive RD families when other genetic test strategies fail to identify a mutation.


Genes | 2017

Whole Genome Sequencing Revealed Mutations in Two Independent Genes as the Underlying Cause of Retinal Degeneration in an Ashkenazi Jewish Pedigree

Kevin Gustafson; Jacque L. Duncan; Pooja Biswas; Angel Soto-Hermida; Hiroko Matsui; David Jakubosky; John Suk; Amalio Telenti; Kelly A. Frazer; Radha Ayyagari

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) causes progressive photoreceptor loss resulting from mutations in over 80 genes. This study identified the genetic cause of RP in three members of a non-consanguineous pedigree. Detailed ophthalmic evaluation was performed in the three affected family members. Whole exome sequencing (WES) and whole genome sequencing (WGS) were performed in the three affected and the two unaffected family members and variants were filtered to detect rare, potentially deleterious variants segregating with disease. WES and WGS did not identify potentially pathogenic variants shared by all three affected members. However, WES identified a previously reported homozygous nonsense mutation in KIZ (c.226C>T, p.Arg76*) in two affected sisters, but not in their affected second cousin. WGS revealed a novel 1.135 kb homozygous deletion in a retina transcript of C21orf2 and a novel 30.651 kb heterozygous deletion in CACNA2D4 in the affected second cousin. The sisters with the KIZ mutation carried no copies of the C21orf2 or CACNA2D4 deletions, while the second cousin with the C21orf2 and CACNA2D4 deletions carried no copies of the KIZ mutation. This study identified two independent, homozygous mutations in genes previously reported in autosomal recessive RP in a non-consanguineous family, and demonstrated the value of WGS when WES fails to identify likely disease-causing mutations.


Physiological Genomics | 2016

Establishing the involvement of the novel gene AGBL5 in retinitis pigmentosa by whole genome sequencing

Kari Branham; Hiroko Matsui; Pooja Biswas; Aditya A. Guru; Michael A. Hicks; John Suk; He Li; David Jakubosky; Tao Long; Amalio Telenti; Naoki Nariai; John R. Heckenlively; Kelly A. Frazer; Paul A. Sieving; Radha Ayyagari

While more than 250 genes are known to cause inherited retinal degenerations (IRD), nearly 40-50% of families have the genetic basis for their disease unknown. In this study we sought to identify the underlying cause of IRD in a family by whole genome sequence (WGS) analysis. Clinical characterization including standard ophthalmic examination, fundus photography, visual field testing, electroretinography, and review of medical and family history was performed. WGS was performed on affected and unaffected family members using Illumina HiSeq X10. Sequence reads were aligned to hg19 using BWA-MEM and variant calling was performed with Genome Analysis Toolkit. The called variants were annotated with SnpEff v4.11, PolyPhen v2.2.2, and CADD v1.3. Copy number variations were called using Genome STRiP (svtoolkit 2.00.1611) and SpeedSeq software. Variants were filtered to detect rare potentially deleterious variants segregating with disease. Candidate variants were validated by dideoxy sequencing. Clinical evaluation revealed typical adolescent-onset recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP) in affected members. WGS identified about 4 million variants in each individual. Two rare and potentially deleterious compound heterozygous variants p.Arg281Cys and p.Arg487* were identified in the gene ATP/GTP binding protein like 5 (AGBL5) as likely causal variants. No additional variants in IRD genes that segregated with disease were identified. Mutation analysis confirmed the segregation of these variants with the IRD in the pedigree. Homology models indicated destabilization of AGBL5 due to the p.Arg281Cys change. Our findings establish the involvement of mutations in AGBL5 in RP and validate the WGS variant filtering pipeline we designed.


Physiological Genomics | 2017

Genetic analysis of 10 pedigrees with inherited retinal degeneration by exome sequencing and phenotype-genotype association

Pooja Biswas; Jacque L. Duncan; Bruno Maranhao; Igor Kozak; Kari Branham; Luis Alexandre Rassi Gabriel; Jonathan H. Lin; Giulio Barteselli; Mili Navani; John Suk; Michelle Parke; Catherine L. Schlechter; Richard G. Weleber; John R. Heckenlively; Gislin Dagnelie; Pauline Lee; S. Amerriazuddin; Radha Ayyagari

Our purpose was to identify causative mutations and characterize the phenotype associated with the genotype in 10 unrelated families with autosomal recessive retinal degeneration. Ophthalmic evaluation and DNA isolation were carried out in 10 pedigrees with inherited retinal degenerations (IRD). Exomes of probands from eight pedigrees were captured using Nimblegen V2/V3 or Agilent V5+UTR kits, and sequencing was performed on Illumina HiSeq. The DHDDS gene was screened for mutations in the remaining two pedigrees with Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. Exome variants were filtered to detect candidate causal variants using exomeSuite software. Segregation and ethnicity-matched control sample analysis were performed by dideoxy sequencing. Retinal histology of a patient with DHDDS mutation was studied by microscopy. Genetic analysis identified six known mutations in ABCA4 (p.Gly1961Glu, p.Ala1773Val, c.5461-10T>C), RPE65 (p.Tyr249Cys, p.Gly484Asp), PDE6B (p.Lys706Ter) and DHDDS (p.Lys42Glu) and ten novel potentially pathogenic variants in CERKL (p.Met323Val fsX20), RPE65 (p.Phe252Ser, Thr454Leu fsX31), ARL6 (p.Arg121His), USH2A (p.Gly3142Ter, p.Cys3294Trp), PDE6B (p.Gln652Ter), and DHDDS (p.Thr206Ala) genes. Among these, variants/mutations in two separate genes were observed to segregate with IRD in two pedigrees. Retinal histopathology of a patient with a DHDDS mutation showed severe degeneration of retinal layers with relative preservation of the retinal pigment epithelium. Analysis of exome variants in ten pedigrees revealed nine novel potential disease-causing variants and nine previously reported homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in the CERKL, ABCA4, RPE65, ARL6, USH2A, PDE6B, and DHDDS genes. Mutations that could be sufficient to cause pathology were observed in more than one gene in one pedigree.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2017

A mutation in IFT43 causes non-syndromic recessive retinal degeneration

Pooja Biswas; Jacque L. Duncan; Muhammad Ali; Hiroko Matsui; Muhammad Asif Naeem; Pongali B Raghavendra; Kelly A. Frazer; Heleen H Arts; Sheikh Riazuddin; Javed Akram; J. Fielding Hejtmancik; S. Amer Riazuddin; Radha Ayyagari

The aim of this work is to identify the molecular cause of autosomal recessive early onset retinal degeneration in a consanguineous pedigree. Seventeen members of a four-generation Pakistani family were recruited and underwent a detailed ophthalmic examination. Exomes of four affected and two unaffected individuals were sequenced. Variants were filtered using exomeSuite to identify rare potentially pathogenic variants in genes expressed in the retina and/or brain and consistent with the pattern of inheritance. Effect of the variant observed in the gene Intraflagellar Transport Protein 43 (IFT43) was studied by heterologous expression in mIMCD3 and MDCK cells. Expression and sub-cellular localization of IFT43 in the retina and transiently transfected cells was examined by RT-PCR, western blot analysis, and immunohistochemistry. Affected members were diagnosed with early onset non-syndromic progressive retinal degeneration and the presence of bone spicules distributed throughout the retina at younger ages while the older affected members showed severe central choroidal atrophy. Whole-exome sequencing analysis identified a novel homozygous c.100 G > A change in IFT43 segregating with retinal degeneration and not present in ethnicity-matched controls. Immunostaining showed IFT43 localized in the photoreceptors, and to the tip of the cilia in transfected mIMCD3 and MDCK cells. The cilia in mIMCD3 and MDCK cells expressing mutant IFT43 were found to be significantly shorter (P < 0.001) than cells expressing wild-type IFT43. Our studies identified a novel homozygous mutation in the ciliary protein IFT43 as the underlying cause of recessive inherited retinal degeneration. This is the first report demonstrating the involvement of IFT43 in retinal degeneration.


The Open Ophthalmology Journal | 2018

Transcriptome Analysis of Orbital Adipose Tissue in Active Thyroid Eye Disease Using Next Generation RNA Sequencing Technology.

Bradford W. Lee; Virender B. Kumar; Pooja Biswas; Audrey C. Ko; Ramzi M. Alameddine; David B. Granet; Radha Ayyagari; Don O. Kikkawa; Bobby S. Korn

Objective: This study utilized Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) to identify differentially expressed transcripts in orbital adipose tissue from patients with active Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) versus healthy controls. Method: This prospective, case-control study enrolled three patients with severe, active thyroid eye disease undergoing orbital decompression, and three healthy controls undergoing routine eyelid surgery with removal of orbital fat. RNA Sequencing (RNA-Seq) was performed on freshly obtained orbital adipose tissue from study patients to analyze the transcriptome. Bioinformatics analysis was performed to determine pathways and processes enriched for the differential expression profile. Quantitative Reverse Transcriptase-Polymerase Chain Reaction (qRT-PCR) was performed to validate the differential expression of selected genes identified by RNA-Seq. Results: RNA-Seq identified 328 differentially expressed genes associated with active thyroid eye disease, many of which were responsible for mediating inflammation, cytokine signaling, adipogenesis, IGF-1 signaling, and glycosaminoglycan binding. The IL-5 and chemokine signaling pathways were highly enriched, and very-low-density-lipoprotein receptor activity and statin medications were implicated as having a potential role in TED. Conclusion: This study is the first to use RNA-Seq technology to elucidate differential gene expression associated with active, severe TED. This study suggests a transcriptional basis for the role of statins in modulating differentially expressed genes that mediate the pathogenesis of thyroid eye disease. Furthermore, the identification of genes with altered levels of expression in active, severe TED may inform the molecular pathways central to this clinical phenotype and guide the development of novel therapeutic agents.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2018

Identification of the genetic determinants responsible for retinal degeneration in families of Mexican descent

Adda Villanueva; Pooja Biswas; Kameron Kishaba; John Suk; Keerti Tadimeti; Pongali B Raghavendra; Karine Nadeau; Bruno Lamontagne; Lambert Busque; Steve Geoffroy; Ian Mongrain; Géraldine Asselin; Sylvie Provost; Marie-Pierre Dubé; Eric Nudleman; Radha Ayyagari

ABSTRACT Purpose: To investigate the clinical characteristics and genetic basis of inherited retinal degeneration (IRD) in six unrelated pedigrees from Mexico. Methods: A complete ophthalmic evaluation including measurement of visual acuities, Goldman kinetic or Humphrey dynamic perimetry, Amsler test, fundus photography, and color vision testing was performed. Family history and blood samples were collected from available family members. DNA from members of two pedigrees was examined for known mutations using the APEX ARRP genotyping microarray and one pedigree using the APEX LCA genotyping microarray. The remaining three pedigrees were analyzed using a custom-designed targeted capture array covering the exons of 233 known retinal degeneration genes. Sequencing was performed on Illumina HiSeq. Reads were mapped against hg19, and variants were annotated using GATK and filtered by exomeSuite. Segregation and ethnicity-matched control sample analyses were performed by dideoxy sequencing. Results: Six pedigrees with IRD were analyzed. Nine rare or novel, potentially pathogenic variants segregating with the phenotype were detected in IMPDH1, USH2A, RPE65, ABCA4, and FAM161A genes. Among these, six were known mutations while the remaining three changes in USH2A, RPE65, and FAM161A genes have not been previously reported to be associated with IRD. Analysis of 100 ethnicity-matched controls did not detect the presence of these three novel variants indicating, these are rare variants in the Mexican population. Conclusions: Screening patients diagnosed with IRD from Mexico identified six known mutations and three rare or novel potentially damaging variants in IMPDH1, USH2A, RPE65, ABCA4, and FAM161A genes that segregated with disease.


Archive | 2018

Identification of Novel Deletions as the Underlying Cause of Retinal Degeneration in Two Pedigrees

Kari Branham; Aditya A. Guru; Igor Kozak; Pooja Biswas; Mohammad Othman; Kameron Kishaba; Hassan Mansoor; Sheikh Riazuddin; John R. Heckenlively; S. Amer Riazuddin; J. Fielding Hejtmancik; Paul A. Sieving; Radha Ayyagari

Retinal dystrophies are a phenotypically and genetically complex group of conditions. Because of this complexity, it can be challenging in many families to determine the inheritance based on pedigree analysis alone. Clinical examinations were performed and blood samples were collected from a North American (M1186) and a consanguineous Pakistani (PKRD168) pedigree affected with two different retinal dystrophies (RD). Based on the structure of the pedigrees, inheritance patterns in the families were difficult to determine. In one family, linkage analysis was performed with markers on X-chromosome. In the second family, whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed. Subsequent Sanger sequencing of genes of interest was performed. Linkage and haplotype analysis localized the disease interval to a 70 Mb region on the X chromosome that encompassed RP2 and RPGR in M1186 . The disease haplotype segregated with RD in all individuals except for an unaffected man (IV:3) and his affected son (V:1) in this pedigree. Subsequent analysis identified a novel RPGR mutation (p. Lys857Glu fs221X) in all affected members of M1186 except V:1. This information suggests that there is an unidentified second cause of retinitis pigmentosa (RP) within the family. A novel two-base-pair deletion (p. Tyr565Ter fsX) in CHM (choroideremia) was found to segregate with RD in PKRD168. This paper highlights the challenges of interpreting family history in families with RD and reports on the identification of novel mutations in two RD families.

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Radha Ayyagari

University of California

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John Suk

University of California

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S. Amer Riazuddin

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Hiroko Matsui

University of California

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