| Literature DB >> 34270938 |
Peter Gergics1, Cathy Smith2, Hironori Bando1, Alexander A L Jorge3, Denise Rockstroh-Lippold4, Sebastian A Vishnopolska5, Frederic Castinetti6, Mariam Maksutova1, Luciani Renata Silveira Carvalho7, Julia Hoppmann4, Julián Martínez Mayer5, Frédérique Albarel6, Debora Braslavsky8, Ana Keselman8, Ignacio Bergadá8, Marcelo A Martí9, Alexandru Saveanu10, Anne Barlier10, Rami Abou Jamra11, Michael H Guo12, Andrew Dauber13, Marilena Nakaguma7, Berenice B Mendonca7, Sajini N Jayakody1, A Bilge Ozel1, Qing Fang1, Qianyi Ma1, Jun Z Li1, Thierry Brue6, María Ines Pérez Millán5, Ivo J P Arnhold7, Roland Pfaeffle14, Jacob O Kitzman15, Sally A Camper16.
Abstract
Pituitary hormone deficiency occurs in ∼1:4,000 live births. Approximately 3% of the cases are due to mutations in the alpha isoform of POU1F1, a pituitary-specific transcriptional activator. We found four separate heterozygous missense variants in unrelated individuals with hypopituitarism that were predicted to affect a minor isoform, POU1F1 beta, which can act as a transcriptional repressor. These variants retain repressor activity, but they shift splicing to favor the expression of the beta isoform, resulting in dominant-negative loss of function. Using a high-throughput splicing reporter assay, we tested 1,070 single-nucleotide variants in POU1F1. We identified 96 splice-disruptive variants, including 14 synonymous variants. In separate cohorts, we found two additional synonymous variants nominated by this screen that co-segregate with hypopituitarism. This study underlines the importance of evaluating the impact of variants on splicing and provides a catalog for interpretation of variants of unknown significance in POU1F1.Entities:
Keywords: PIT-1; alternative splicing; growth hormone deficiency; hypopituitarism; massively parallel splicing assay; multiplexed assays of variant effects; transcriptional regulation; variants of uncertain significance
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34270938 PMCID: PMC8387473 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.06.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025