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Can tandem alternative splicing and evasion of premature termination codon surveillance contribute to attenuated Peutz-Jeghers syndrome?

Nour GazzazF Graeme FrostEmily AldermanPhillip A RichmondJoshua DalmannSusan LinAreesha SalmanKate L Del BelAnna LehmanStuart E TurveyElizabeth M J LeePraveen F Cherukuri
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2022)
Alternative use of short distance tandem sites such as NAGN n AG are a common mechanism of alternative splicing; however, single nucleotide variants are rarely reported as likely to generate or to disrupt tandem splice sites. We identify a pathogenic intron 5 STK11 variant (NM_000455.4:c.[735-6A>G];[=]) segregating with the mucocutaneous features but not the hamartomatous polyps of Peutz-Jeghers syndrome in two individuals. By RNAseq analysis of peripheral blood mRNA, this variant was shown to generate a novel and preferentially used tandem proximal splice acceptor (AAGTGAAG). The variant transcript (NM_000455.4:c.734_734 + 1insTGAAG), which encodes a frameshift (p.[Tyr246Glufs*43]) constituted 36%-43% of STK11 transcripts suggesting partial escape from nonsense mediated mRNA decay and translation of a truncated protein. A review of the ClinVar database identified other similar variants. We suggest that nucleotide changes creating or disrupting tandem alternative splice sites are a pertinent disease mechanism and require contextualization for clinical reporting. Additionally, we hypothesize that some pathogenic STK11 variants cause an attenuated phenotype.
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