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Alternative splicing and ACMG-AMP-2015-based classification of PALB2 genetic variants: an ENIGMA report

Authors :
Lopez-Perolio, I
Leman, R
Behar, R
Lattimore, V
Pearson, JF
Castera, L
Martins, A
Vaur, D
Goardon, N
Davy, G
Garre, P
Garcia-Barberan, V
Llovet, P
Perez-Segura, P
Diaz-Rubio, E
Caldes, T
Hruska, KS
Hsuan, V
Wu, S
Pesaran, T
Karam, R
Vallon-Christersson, J
Borg, A
Valenzuela-Palomo, A
Velasco, EA
Southey, M
Vreeswijk, MPG
Devilee, P
Kvist, A
Spurdle, AB
Walker, LC
Krieger, S
de la Hoya, M
Lopez-Perolio, I
Leman, R
Behar, R
Lattimore, V
Pearson, JF
Castera, L
Martins, A
Vaur, D
Goardon, N
Davy, G
Garre, P
Garcia-Barberan, V
Llovet, P
Perez-Segura, P
Diaz-Rubio, E
Caldes, T
Hruska, KS
Hsuan, V
Wu, S
Pesaran, T
Karam, R
Vallon-Christersson, J
Borg, A
Valenzuela-Palomo, A
Velasco, EA
Southey, M
Vreeswijk, MPG
Devilee, P
Kvist, A
Spurdle, AB
Walker, LC
Krieger, S
de la Hoya, M
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: PALB2 monoallelic loss-of-function germ-line variants confer a breast cancer risk comparable to the average BRCA2 pathogenic variant. Recommendations for risk reduction strategies in carriers are similar. Elaborating robust criteria to identify loss-of-function variants in PALB2-without incurring overprediction-is thus of paramount clinical relevance. Towards this aim, we have performed a comprehensive characterisation of alternative splicing in PALB2, analysing its relevance for the classification of truncating and splice site variants according to the 2015 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics-Association for Molecular Pathology guidelines. METHODS: Alternative splicing was characterised in RNAs extracted from blood, breast and fimbriae/ovary-related human specimens (n=112). RNAseq, RT-PCR/CE and CloneSeq experiments were performed by five contributing laboratories. Centralised revision/curation was performed to assure high-quality annotations. Additional splicing analyses were performed in PALB2 c.212-1G>A, c.1684+1G>A, c.2748+2T>G, c.3113+5G>A, c.3350+1G>A, c.3350+4A>C and c.3350+5G>A carriers. The impact of the findings on PVS1 status was evaluated for truncating and splice site variant. RESULTS: We identified 88 naturally occurring alternative splicing events (81 newly described), including 4 in-frame events predicted relevant to evaluate PVS1 status of splice site variants. We did not identify tissue-specific alternate gene transcripts in breast or ovarian-related samples, supporting the clinical relevance of blood-based splicing studies. CONCLUSIONS: PVS1 is not necessarily warranted for splice site variants targeting four PALB2 acceptor sites (exons 2, 5, 7 and 10). As a result, rare variants at these splice sites cannot be assumed pathogenic/likely pathogenic without further evidences. Our study puts a warning in up to five PALB2 genetic variants that are currently reported as pathogenic/likely pathogenic in ClinVar.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1340019372
Document Type :
Electronic Resource