Generation of tandem alternative splice acceptor sites and CLTC haploinsufficiency: A cause of CLTC-related disorder.
Adam P SageHyun Kyung LeeJoshua DalmannSusan LinSimran SamraAreesha SalmanKate L Del BelWenhui Laura LiAnna LehmanStuart E TurveyElizabeth M J LeePhillip A RichmondPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2023)
Tandem splice acceptors (NAGN n AG) are a common mechanism of alternative splicing, but variants that are likely to generate or to disrupt tandem splice sites have rarely been reported as disease causing. We identify a pathogenic intron 23 CLTC variant (NM_004859.4:c.[3766-13_3766-5del];[=]) in a propositus with intellectual disability and behavioral problems. By RNAseq analysis of peripheral blood mRNA, this variant generates transcripts using cryptic proximal splice acceptors (NM_004859.4: r.3765_3766insTTCACAGAAAGGAACTAG, and NM_004859.4:r.3765_3766insAAAGGAACTAG). Given that the propositus expresses 38% the level of CLTC transcripts as unaffected controls, these variant transcripts, which encode premature termination codons, likely undergo nonsense mediated mRNA decay (NMD). This is the first functional evidence for CLTC haploinsufficiency as a cause of CLTC-related disorder and the first evidence that the generation of tandem alternative splice sites causes CLTC-related disorder. We suggest that variants creating tandem alternative splice sites are an underreported disease mechanism and that transcriptome-level analysis should be routinely pursued to define the pathogenicity of such variants.