4.6 Article

The CDH1 c.1901C>T Variant: A Founder Variant in the Portuguese Population with Severe Impact in mRNA Splicing

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13174464

Keywords

HDGC; CDH1; founder effect; missense variants; cryptic splicing

Categories

Funding

  1. FEDER-Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional funds through the COMPETE 2020-Operational Programme for Competitiveness and Internationalization (POCI), Portugal 2020
  2. FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia/Ministerio da Ciencia, Tecnologia e Inovacao [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007274]
  3. LEGOH [PTDC/BTM-TEC/6706/2020]
  4. Norte Portugal Regional Programme (NORTE 2020), under the PORTUGAL 2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [NORTE-010145-FEDER-000003, POCI-01-0145-FEDER-016390, PTDC/BTM-TEC/30164/2017]
  5. POCI
  6. FCT
  7. ERDF

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This study identified a CDH1 founder variant in Northern Portugal, where the c.1901C>T variant predisposes carriers to hereditary diffuse gastric cancer and lobular breast cancer. By validating the splicing site of c.1901C>T and calculating the mutational age, the research provides crucial insights into the genetic risks and disease characteristics of hereditary diffuse gastric cancer families in this region.
Simple Summary An unexpectedly high number of early-onset diffuse gastric and lobular breast cancer in apparently unrelated families carrying the same CDH1 c.1901C>T variant (formerly known as missense p.A634V) in Northern Portugal suggested a founder effect in this region. We demonstrated that c.1901C>T is a truncating variant triggered by cryptic splicing, calculated its mutational age, and characterized the tumour spectrum and age of onset in affected families. Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC) caused by CDH1 variants predisposes to early-onset diffuse gastric (DGC) and lobular breast cancer (LBC). In Northern Portugal, the unusually high number of HDGC cases in unrelated families carrying the c.1901C>T variant (formerly known as p.A634V) suggested this as a CDH1-founder variant. We aimed to demonstrate that c.1901C>T is a bona fide truncating variant inducing cryptic splicing, to calculate the timing of a potential founder effect, and to characterize tumour spectrum and age of onset in carrying families. The impact in splicing was proven by using carriers' RNA for PCR-cloning sequencing and allelic expression imbalance analysis with SNaPshot. Carriers and noncarriers were haplotyped for 12 polymorphic markers, and the decay of haplotype sharing (DHS) method was used to estimate the time to the most common ancestor of c.1901C>T. Clinical information from 58 carriers was collected and analysed. We validated the cryptic splice site within CDH1-exon 12, which was preferred over the canonical one in 100% of sequenced clones. Cryptic splicing induced an out-of-frame 37bp deletion in exon 12, premature truncation (p.Ala634ProfsTer7), and consequently RNA mediated decay. The haplotypes carrying the c.1901C>T variant were found to share a common ancestral estimated at 490 years (95% Confidence Interval 445-10,900). Among 58 carriers (27 males (M)-31 females (F); 13-83 years), DGC occurred in 11 (18.9%; 4M-7F; average age 33 +/- 12) and LBC in 6 females (19.4%; average age 50 +/- 8). Herein, we demonstrated that the c.1901C>T variant is a loss-of-function splice-site variant that underlies the first CDH1-founder effect in Portugal. Knowledge on this founder effect will drive genetic testing of this specific variant in HDGC families in this geographical region and allow intrafamilial penetrance analysis and better estimation of variant-associated tumour risks, disease age of onset, and spectrum.

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