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RAD51D Aberrant Splicing in Breast Cancer: Identification of Splicing Regulatory Elements and Minigene-Based Evaluation of 53 DNA Variants

Authors :
Bueno-Martínez, Elena
Sanoguera-Miralles, Lara
Valenzuela-Palomo, Alberto
Lorca, Víctor
Gómez-Sanz, Alicia
Carvalho, Sara
Allen, Jamie
Infante, Mar
Pérez-Segura, Pedro
Lázaro, Conxi
Easton, Douglas F
Devilee, Peter
Vreeswijk, Maaike P G
De La Hoya, Miguel
Velasco, Eladio A
Publisher :
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository

Abstract

RAD51D loss-of-function variants increase lifetime risk of breast and ovarian cancer. Splicing disruption is a frequent pathogenic mechanism associated with variants in susceptibility genes. Herein, we have assessed the splicing and clinical impact of splice-site and exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) variants identified through the study of ~113,000 women of the BRIDGES cohort. A RAD51D minigene with exons 2-9 was constructed in splicing vector pSAD. Eleven BRIDGES splice-site variants (selected by MaxEntScan) were introduced into the minigene by site-directed mutagenesis and tested in MCF-7 cells. The 11 variants disrupted splicing, collectively generating 25 different aberrant transcripts. All variants but one produced negligible levels (A demonstrated a complete aberrant splicing pattern without the FL transcript. On the other hand, c.214T>C increased efficiency of exon 3 recognition, so only the FL transcript was detected (100%). In conclusion, 41 RAD51D spliceogenic variants (28 of which were from the BRIDGES cohort) were identified by minigene assays. We show that minigene-based mapping of ESEs is a powerful approach for identifying ESE hotspots and ESE-disrupting variants. Finally, we have classified nine variants as likely pathogenic according to ACMG/AMP-based guidelines, highlighting the complex relationship between splicing alterations and variant interpretation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........df886fd3edb35b44415ec0565963e5ab