Spectrum of splicing variants in disease genes and the ability of RNA analysis to reduce uncertainty in clinical interpretation

The complexities of gene expression pose challenges for the clinical interpretation of splicing variants. To better understand splicing variants and their contribution to hereditary disease, we evaluated their prevalence, clinical classifications, and associations with diseases, inheritance, and fun...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of human genetics 2021-04, Vol.108 (4), p.696-708
Hauptverfasser: Truty, Rebecca, Ouyang, Karen, Rojahn, Susan, Garcia, Sarah, Colavin, Alexandre, Hamlington, Barbara, Freivogel, Mary, Nussbaum, Robert L., Nykamp, Keith, Aradhya, Swaroop
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 696
container_title American journal of human genetics
container_volume 108
creator Truty, Rebecca
Ouyang, Karen
Rojahn, Susan
Garcia, Sarah
Colavin, Alexandre
Hamlington, Barbara
Freivogel, Mary
Nussbaum, Robert L.
Nykamp, Keith
Aradhya, Swaroop
description The complexities of gene expression pose challenges for the clinical interpretation of splicing variants. To better understand splicing variants and their contribution to hereditary disease, we evaluated their prevalence, clinical classifications, and associations with diseases, inheritance, and functional characteristics in a 689,321-person clinical cohort and two large public datasets. In the clinical cohort, splicing variants represented 13% of all variants classified as pathogenic (P), likely pathogenic (LP), or variants of uncertain significance (VUSs). Most splicing variants were outside essential splice sites and were classified as VUSs. Among all individuals tested, 5.4% had a splicing VUS. If RNA analysis were to contribute supporting evidence to variant interpretation, we estimated that splicing VUSs would be reclassified in 1.7% of individuals in our cohort. This would result in a clinically significant result (i.e., P/LP) in 0.1% of individuals overall because most reclassifications would change VUSs to likely benign. In ClinVar, splicing VUSs were 4.8% of reported variants and could benefit from RNA analysis. In the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD), splicing variants comprised 9.4% of variants in protein-coding genes; most were rare, precluding unambiguous classification as benign. Splicing variants were depleted in genes associated with dominant inheritance and haploinsufficiency, although some genes had rare variants at essential splice sites or had common splicing variants that were most likely compatible with normal gene function. Overall, we describe the contribution of splicing variants to hereditary disease, the potential utility of RNA analysis for reclassifying splicing VUSs, and how natural variation may confound clinical interpretation of splicing variants.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.03.006
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source MEDLINE; Cell Press Free Archives; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; PubMed Central; EZB Electronic Journals Library
subjects Alternative Splicing - genetics
Cohort Studies
Computer Simulation
Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures
Disease - genetics
functional studies
gene panel
genetic testing
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Humans
in silico prediction
next-generation sequencing
RNA - analysis
RNA - genetics
RNA Splice Sites - genetics
Sequence Analysis, RNA
splice site
splicing
Uncertainty
variant classification
variants of uncertain significance
title Spectrum of splicing variants in disease genes and the ability of RNA analysis to reduce uncertainty in clinical interpretation
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