| Literature DB >> 25066652 |
Neeraj Sharma1, Patrick R Sosnay, Anabela S Ramalho, Christopher Douville, Arianna Franca, Laura B Gottschalk, Jeenah Park, Melissa Lee, Briana Vecchio-Pagan, Karen S Raraigh, Margarida D Amaral, Rachel Karchin, Garry R Cutting.
Abstract
Assessment of the functional consequences of variants near splice sites is a major challenge in the diagnostic laboratory. To address this issue, we created expression minigenes (EMGs) to determine the RNA and protein products generated by splice site variants (n = 10) implicated in cystic fibrosis (CF). Experimental results were compared with the splicing predictions of eight in silico tools. EMGs containing the full-length Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) coding sequence and flanking intron sequences generated wild-type transcript and fully processed protein in Human Embryonic Kidney (HEK293) and CF bronchial epithelial (CFBE41o-) cells. Quantification of variant induced aberrant mRNA isoforms was concordant using fragment analysis and pyrosequencing. The splicing patterns of c.1585-1G>A and c.2657+5G>A were comparable to those reported in primary cells from individuals bearing these variants. Bioinformatics predictions were consistent with experimental results for 9/10 variants (MES), 8/10 variants (NNSplice), and 7/10 variants (SSAT and Sroogle). Programs that estimate the consequences of mis-splicing predicted 11/16 (HSF and ASSEDA) and 10/16 (Fsplice and SplicePort) experimentally observed mRNA isoforms. EMGs provide a robust experimental approach for clinical interpretation of splice site variants and refinement of in silico tools.Entities:
Keywords: CFTR; expression minigene; in silico tools; splicing
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25066652 PMCID: PMC4425124 DOI: 10.1002/humu.22624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878