| Literature DB >> 24569164 |
Mara Colombo1, Marinus J Blok2, Phillip Whiley3, Marta Santamariña4, Sara Gutiérrez-Enríquez5, Atocha Romero6, Pilar Garre6, Alexandra Becker7, Lindsay Denise Smith8, Giovanna De Vecchi1, Rita D Brandão2, Demis Tserpelis2, Melissa Brown9, Ana Blanco10, Sandra Bonache11, Mireia Menéndez12, Claude Houdayer13, Claudia Foglia1, James D Fackenthal14, Diana Baralle8, Barbara Wappenschmidt7, Eduardo Díaz-Rubio15, Trinidad Caldés6, Logan Walker16, Orland Díez17, Ana Vega10, Amanda B Spurdle18, Paolo Radice1, Miguel De La Hoya19.
Abstract
Loss-of-function germline mutations in BRCA1 (MIM #113705) confer markedly increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer. The full-length transcript codifies for a protein involved in DNA repair pathways and cell-cycle checkpoints. Several BRCA1 splicing isoforms have been described in public domain databases, but the physiological role (if any) of BRCA1 alternative splicing remains to be established. An accurate description of 'naturally occurring' alternative splicing at this locus is a prerequisite to understand its biological significance. However, a systematic analysis of alternative splicing at the BRCA1 locus is yet to be conducted. Here, the Evidence-Based Network for the Interpretation of Germ-Line Mutant Alleles consortium combines RT-PCR, exon scanning, cloning, sequencing and relative semi-quantification to describe naturally occurring BRCA1 alternative splicing with unprecedented resolution. The study has been conducted in blood-related RNA sources, commonly used for clinical splicing assays, as well as in one healthy breast tissue. We have characterized a total of 63 BRCA1 alternative splicing events, including 35 novel findings. A minimum of 10 splicing events (Δ1Aq, Δ5, Δ5q, Δ8p, Δ9, Δ(9,10), Δ9_11, Δ11q, Δ13p and Δ14p) represent a substantial fraction of the full-length expression level (ranging from 5 to 100%). Remarkably, our data indicate that BRCA1 alternative splicing is similar in blood and breast, a finding supporting the clinical relevance of blood-based in vitro splicing assays. Overall, our data suggest an alternative splicing model in which most non-mutually exclusive alternative splicing events are randomly combined into individual mRNA molecules to produce hundreds of different BRCA1 isoforms.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24569164 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddu075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150