| Literature DB >> 27008870 |
Miguel de la Hoya1, Omar Soukarieh2, Irene López-Perolio3, Ana Vega4, Logan C Walker5, Yvette van Ierland6, Diana Baralle7, Marta Santamariña8, Vanessa Lattimore5, Juul Wijnen9, Philip Whiley10, Ana Blanco4, Michela Raponi7, Jan Hauke11, Barbara Wappenschmidt11, Alexandra Becker11, Thomas V O Hansen12, Raquel Behar3, KConFaB Investigators13, Diether Niederacher14, Norbert Arnold15, Bernd Dworniczak16, Doris Steinemann17, Ulrike Faust18, Wendy Rubinstein19, Peter J Hulick20, Claude Houdayer21, Sandrine M Caputo22, Laurent Castera23, Tina Pesaran24, Elizabeth Chao24, Carole Brewer25, Melissa C Southey26, Christi J van Asperen6, Christian F Singer27, Jan Sullivan28, Nicola Poplawski29, Phuong Mai30, Julian Peto31, Nichola Johnson32, Barbara Burwinkel33, Harald Surowy33, Stig E Bojesen34, Henrik Flyger35, Annika Lindblom36, Sara Margolin37, Jenny Chang-Claude38, Anja Rudolph39, Paolo Radice40, Laura Galastri41, Janet E Olson42, Emily Hallberg42, Graham G Giles43, Roger L Milne43, Irene L Andrulis44, Gord Glendon45, Per Hall46, Kamila Czene46, Fiona Blows47, Mitul Shah47, Qin Wang48, Joe Dennis48, Kyriaki Michailidou49, Lesley McGuffog48, Manjeet K Bolla48, Antonis C Antoniou48, Douglas F Easton48, Fergus J Couch50, Sean Tavtigian51, Maaike P Vreeswijk6, Michael Parsons10, Huong D Meeks51, Alexandra Martins2, David E Goldgar52, Amanda B Spurdle53.
Abstract
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.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27008870 PMCID: PMC5081057 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddw094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150