Contribution of mRNA Splicing to Mismatch Repair Gene Sequence Variant Interpretation

Functional assays that assess mRNA splicing can be used in interpretation of the clinical significance of sequence variants, including the Lynch syndrome-associated mismatch repair (MMR) genes. The purpose of this study was to investigate the contribution of splicing assay data to the classification...

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Main Authors: Bryony A. Thompson, Rhiannon Walters, Michael T. Parsons, Troy Dumenil, Mark Drost, Yvonne Tiersma, Noralane M. Lindor, Sean V. Tavtigian, Niels de Wind, Amanda B. Spurdle, the InSiGHT Variant Interpretation Committee, Fahd Al-Mulla, Daniel Buchanan, Susan Farrington, Ian Frayling, Maurizio Genuardi, Elke Holinski-Feder, Maija R. J. Kohonen-Corish, Andreas Laner, Alexandra Martins, Finlay Macrae, Pål Møller, Monika Morak, Elisabet Ognedal, John-Paul Plazzer, Lene Juel Rasmussen, Carli Tops
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fgene.2020.00798/full
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Summary:Functional assays that assess mRNA splicing can be used in interpretation of the clinical significance of sequence variants, including the Lynch syndrome-associated mismatch repair (MMR) genes. The purpose of this study was to investigate the contribution of splicing assay data to the classification of MMR gene sequence variants. We assayed mRNA splicing for 24 sequence variants in MLH1, MSH2, and MSH6, including 12 missense variants that were also assessed using a cell-free in vitro MMR activity (CIMRA) assay. Multifactorial likelihood analysis was conducted for each variant, combining CIMRA outputs and clinical data where available. We collated these results with existing public data to provide a dataset of splicing assay results for a total of 671 MMR gene sequence variants (328 missense/in-frame indel), and published and unpublished repair activity measurements for 154 of these variants. There were 241 variants for which a splicing aberration was detected: 92 complete impact, 33 incomplete impact, and 116 where it was not possible to determine complete versus incomplete splicing impact. Splicing results mostly aided in the interpretation of intronic (72%) and silent (92%) variants and were the least useful for missense substitutions/in-frame indels (10%). MMR protein functional activity assays were more useful in the analysis of these exonic variants but by design they were not able to detect clinically important splicing aberrations identified by parallel mRNA assays. The development of high throughput assays that can quantitatively assess impact on mRNA transcript expression and protein function in parallel will streamline classification of MMR gene sequence variants.
ISSN:1664-8021