4.5 Article

Multiple sequence variants of BRCA2 exon 7 alter splicing regulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 49, Issue 10, Pages 609-617

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2012-100965

Keywords

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Funding

  1. French National Cancer Institute
  2. 'Direction Generale de l'Offre des Soins' (INCa-DGOS)
  3. French North West Canceropole
  4. French National Cancer Institute (INCa)

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Background Exonic variants of unknown biological significance (VUS) identified in patients can affect mRNA splicing, either by changing 50 or 30 splice sites or by modifying splicing regulatory elements. Bioinformatic predictions of these elements are still inaccurate and only few such elements have been functionally mapped in BRCA2. We studied the effect on splicing of eight exon 7 VUS, selected from the French UMD-BRCA2 mutation database. Methods We performed splicing minigene assays and analyses of patient RNA. We also developed a pyrosequencing-based quantitative assay, to measure, in patient RNA, the relative contribution of each allele to the production of exon 7-containing transcripts. Moreover, an exonic splicing enhancer (ESE)-dependent minigene assay was used to evaluate the splicing regulatory properties of wild-type and mutant segments. Results Six out of the eight variants induced splicing defects. In the minigene assay, c.517G > T and c. 631G > A altered the natural splice sites, c.572A > G created a new 50 splice site, and c.520C > T, c.587G > A and c.617C > G induced exon 7 skipping (66%, 25% and 46%, respectively). Pyrosequencing of patient RNA confirmed these levels of exon skipping for c.520C > T and c.617C > G. Results from the ESE-dependent minigene assay indicated that c.520C > T and c.587G > A disturb splicing regulatory elements. Conclusions BRCA2 exon 7 splicing is regulated by multiple exonic elements and is sensitive to disease-associated sequence variations. Measurements of allelic imbalance in patient-derived RNA and/or quantitative analyses using minigene assays provide valuable estimates of the extent of partial splicing defects. Assessment of pathogenicity of variants with partial splicing effect awaits additional evidence and especially the completion of segregation analyses.

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