APA
Fraile Bethencourt, Eugenia & Valenzuela Palomo, Alberto & Díez Gómez, Beatriz & Caloca, María José & Gómez Barrero, Susana & Velasco Sampedro, Eladio Andrés (2019-05 ) .Minigene Splicing Assays Identify 12 Spliceogenic Variants of BRCA2 Exons 14 and 15.
ISO 690
Fraile Bethencourt, Eugenia & Valenzuela Palomo, Alberto & Díez Gómez, Beatriz & Caloca, María José & Gómez Barrero, Susana & Velasco Sampedro, Eladio Andrés. 2019-05 .Minigene Splicing Assays Identify 12 Spliceogenic Variants of BRCA2 Exons 14 and 15.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39628
Abstract:
A relevant fraction of BRCA2 variants is associated with splicing alterations and with
an increased risk of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC). In this work, we
have carried out a thorough study of variants from BRCA2 exons 14 and 15 reported
at mutation databases. A total of 294 variants from exons 14 and 15 and flanking
intronic sequences were analyzed with the online splicing tools NNSplice and Human
Splicing Finder. Fifty-three out of these 294 variants were selected as candidate splicing
variants. All variants but one, were introduced into the minigene MGBR2_ex14-20 (with
exons 14¿20) by site-directed mutagenesis and assayed in MCF-7 cells. Twelve of the
remaining 52 variants (23.1%) impaired splicing at different degrees, yielding from 5
to 100% of aberrant transcripts. Nine variants affected the natural acceptor or donor
sites of both exons and three affected putative enhancers or silencers. Fluorescent
capillary electrophoresis revealed at least 10 different anomalous transcripts: H(E14q5),
1 (E14p10), 1(E14p246), 1(E14q256), 1(E14), 1(E15p12), 1(E15p13), 1(E15p83),
1(E15) and a 942-nt fragment of unknown structure. All transcripts, except for
1(E14q256) and 1(E15p12), are expected to truncate the BRCA2 protein. Nine variants
induced severe splicing aberrations with more than 90% of abnormal transcripts. Thus,
according to the guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics,
eight variants should be classified as pathogenic (c.7008-2A > T, c.7008-1G > A,
c.7435+1G > C, c.7436-2A > T, c.7436-2A > G, c.7617+1G > A, c.7617+1G > T,
and c.7617+2T > G), one as likely pathogenic (c.7008-3C > G) and three remain
as variants of uncertain clinical significance or VUS (c.7177A > G, c.7447A > G and
c.7501C > T). In conclusion, functional assays by minigenes constitute a valuable
strategy to primarily check the splicing impact of DNA variants and their clinical
interpretation. While bioinformatics predictions of splice site variants were accurate,
those of enhancer or silencer variants were poor (only 3/23 spliceogenic variants)
which showed weak impacts on splicing (¿5¿16% of aberrant isoforms). So, the
Exonic Splicing Enhancer and Silencer (ESE and ESS, respectively) prediction algorithms
require further improvement.