4.8 Article

Determinants of the Usage of Splice-Associated cis-Motifs Predict the Distribution of Human Pathogenic SNPs

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 518-529

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msv251

Keywords

pathogenic SNPs; splicing cis-motif; splice site; exonic splicing enhancer

Funding

  1. University of Bath
  2. Medical Research Grant [MR/L007215/1]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [ERC-2014-ADG 669207]

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Where in genes do pathogenic mutations tend to occur and does this provide clues as to the possible underlying mechanisms by which single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) cause disease? As splice-disrupting mutations tend to occur predominantly at exon ends, known also to be hot spots of cis-exonic splice control elements, we examine the relationship between the relative density of such exonic cis-motifs and pathogenic SNPs. In particular, we focus on the intragene distribution of exonic splicing enhancers (ESE) and the covariance between them and disease-associated SNPs. In addition to showing that disease-causing genes tend to be genes with a high intron density, consistent with missplicing, five factors established as trends in ESE usage, are considered: relative position in exons, relative position in genes, flanking intron size, splice sites usage, and phase. We find that more than 76% of pathogenic SNPs are within 3-69 bp of exon ends where ESEs generally reside, this being 13% more than expected. Overall from enrichment of pathogenic SNPs at exon ends, we estimate that approximately 20-45% of SNPs affect splicing. Importantly, we find that within genes pathogenic SNPs tend to occur in splicing-relevant regions with low ESE density: they are found to occur preferentially in the terminal half of genes, in exons flanked by short introns and at the ends of phase (0,0) exons with 3' non-AGgt splice site. We suggest the concept of the fragile exon, one home to pathogenic SNPs owing to its vulnerability to splice disruption owing to low ESE density.

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