| Literature DB >> 32369867 |
Jin-Huan Lin1,2,3, Emmanuelle Masson1,4, Arnaud Boulling1, Matthew Hayden5, David N Cooper5, Claude Férec1,4, Zhuan Liao2,3, Jian-Min Chen1.
Abstract
In the human genome, most 5' splice sites (~99%) employ the canonical GT dinucleotide whereas a small minority (~1%) use the noncanonical GC dinucleotide. The functionality and pathogenicity of 5' splice site GT>GC (+2T>C) variants have been extensively studied but we know very little about 5' splice site GC>GT (+2C>T) variants. Herein, we have addressed this deficiency by performing a meta-analysis of reported +2C>T "pathogenic" variants together with a functional analysis of engineered +2C>T substitutions using a cell culture-based full-length gene splicing assay. Our results establish proof of concept that +2C>T variants are qualitatively different from +2T>C variants in terms of their functionality and suggest that, in sharp contrast to +2T>C variants, most if not all +2C>T variants have no pathological relevance. Our findings have important implications for interpreting the clinical relevance of +2C>T variants and understanding the evolutionary switching between GT and GC 5' splice sites in mammalian genomes.Entities:
Keywords: +2C>T variant; +2T>C variant; 5′ splice site; Human Gene Mutation Database; full-length gene splicing assay; noncanonical GC dinucleotide
Year: 2020 PMID: 32369867 DOI: 10.1002/humu.24029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878