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Classifying MLH1 and MSH2 variants using bioinformatic prediction,splicing assays,segregation, and tumor characteristics
Authors:Sven Arnold  Daniel D Buchanan  Melissa Barker  Lesley Jaskowski  Michael D Walsh  Genevieve Birney  Michael O Woods  John L Hopper  Mark A Jenkins  Melissa A Brown  Sean V Tavtigian  David E Goldgar  Joanne P Young  Amanda B Spurdle
Institution:1. Genetics and Population Health Division, Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane, Australia;2. School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia;3. Discipline of Genetics, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, NL, Canada;4. Centre for Genetic Epidemiology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia;5. School of Medicine, and School of Molecular and Microbial Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia;6. International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France;7. Department of Dermatology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Abstract:Reliable methods for predicting functional consequences of variants in disease genes would be beneficial in the clinical setting. This study was undertaken to predict, and confirm in vitro, splicing aberrations associated with mismatch repair (MMR) variants identified in familial colon cancer patients. Six programs were used to predict the effect of 13 MLH1 and 6 MSH2 gene variants on pre‐mRNA splicing. mRNA from cycloheximide‐treated lymphoblastoid cell lines of variant carriers was screened for splicing aberrations. Tumors of variant carriers were tested for microsatellite instability and MMR protein expression. Variant segregation in families was assessed using Bayes factor causality analysis. Amino acid alterations were examined for evolutionary conservation and physicochemical properties. Splicing aberrations were detected for 10 variants, including a frameshift as a minor cDNA product, and altered ratio of known alternate splice products. Loss of splice sites was well predicted by splice‐site prediction programs SpliceSiteFinder (90%) and NNSPLICE (90%), but consequence of splice site loss was less accurately predicted. No aberrations correlated with ESE predictions for the nine exonic variants studied. Seven of eight missense variants had normal splicing (88%), but only one was a substitution considered neutral from evolutionary/physicochemical analysis. Combined with information from tumor and segregation analysis, and literature review, 16 of 19 variants were considered clinically relevant. Bioinformatic tools for prediction of splicing aberrations need improvement before use without supporting studies to assess variant pathogenicity. Classification of mismatch repair gene variants is assisted by a comprehensive approach that includes in vitro, tumor pathology, clinical, and evolutionary conservation data. Hum Mutat 0, 1–14, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:MLH1  MSH2  MMR  splicing  bioinformatics  pathogenicity  tumor  cancer
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