Combined genetic and splicing analysis of BRCA1 c.[594-2A>C; 641A>G] highlights the relevance of naturally occurring in-frame transcripts for developing disease gene variant classification algorithms.

Miguel de la Hoya; Omar Soukarieh; Irene López-Perolio; Ana Vega; Logan C Walker; Yvette van Ierland; Diana Baralle; Marta Santamariña; Vanessa Lattimore; Juul Wijnen; +65 more... Philip Whiley; Ana Blanco; Michela Raponi; Jan Hauke; Barbara Wappenschmidt; Alexandra Becker; Thomas VO Hansen; Raquel Behar; KConFaB Investigators; Diether Niederacher; Norbert Arnold; Bernd Dworniczak; Doris Steinemann; Ulrike Faust; Wendy Rubinstein; Peter J Hulick; Claude Houdayer; Sandrine M Caputo; Laurent Castera; Tina Pesaran; Elizabeth Chao; Carole Brewer; Melissa C Southey; Christi J van Asperen; Christian F Singer; Jan Sullivan; Nicola Poplawski; Phuong Mai; Julian Peto ORCID logo; Nichola Johnson; Barbara Burwinkel; Harald Surowy; Stig E Bojesen; Henrik Flyger; Annika Lindblom; Sara Margolin; Jenny Chang-Claude; Anja Rudolph; Paolo Radice; Laura Galastri; Janet E Olson; Emily Hallberg; Graham G Giles; Roger L Milne; Irene L Andrulis; Gord Glendon; Per Hall; Kamila Czene; Fiona Blows; Mitul Shah; Qin Wang; Joe Dennis; Kyriaki Michailidou; Lesley McGuffog; Manjeet K Bolla; Antonis C Antoniou; Douglas F Easton; Fergus J Couch; Sean Tavtigian; Maaike P Vreeswijk; Michael Parsons; Huong D Meeks; Alexandra Martins; David E Goldgar; Amanda B Spurdle; (2016) Combined genetic and splicing analysis of BRCA1 c.[594-2A>C; 641A>G] highlights the relevance of naturally occurring in-frame transcripts for developing disease gene variant classification algorithms. Human molecular genetics, 25 (11). pp. 2256-2268. ISSN 0964-6906 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddw094
Copy

A recent analysis using family history weighting and co-observation classification modeling indicated that BRCA1 c.594-2A > C (IVS9-2A > C), previously described to cause exon 10 skipping (a truncating alteration), displays characteristics inconsistent with those of a high risk pathogenic BRCA1 variant. We used large-scale genetic and clinical resources from the ENIGMA, CIMBA and BCAC consortia to assess pathogenicity of c.594-2A > C. The combined odds for causality considering case-control, segregation and breast tumor pathology information was 3.23 × 10-8 Our data indicate that c.594-2A > C is always in cis with c.641A > G. The spliceogenic effect of c.[594-2A > C;641A > G] was characterized using RNA analysis of human samples and splicing minigenes. As expected, c.[594-2A > C; 641A > G] caused exon 10 skipping, albeit not due to c.594-2A > C impairing the acceptor site but rather by c.641A > G modifying exon 10 splicing regulatory element(s). Multiple blood-based RNA assays indicated that the variant allele did not produce detectable levels of full-length transcripts, with a per allele BRCA1 expression profile composed of ≈70-80% truncating transcripts, and ≈20-30% of in-frame Δ9,10 transcripts predicted to encode a BRCA1 protein with tumor suppression function.We confirm that BRCA1c.[594-2A > C;641A > G] should not be considered a high-risk pathogenic variant. Importantly, results from our detailed mRNA analysis suggest that BRCA-associated cancer risk is likely not markedly increased for individuals who carry a truncating variant in BRCA1 exons 9 or 10, or any other BRCA1 allele that permits 20-30% of tumor suppressor function. More generally, our findings highlight the importance of assessing naturally occurring alternative splicing for clinical evaluation of variants in disease-causing genes.

Full text not available from this repository.

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads