Contribution of Noncanonical Splice Variants to TTN Truncating Variant Cardiomyopathy

Author:

Patel Parth N.12ORCID,Ito Kaoru13ORCID,Willcox Jon A.L.1ORCID,Haghighi Alireza124ORCID,Jang Min Young12,Gorham Joshua M.1ORCID,DePalma Steven R.1ORCID,Lam Lien1ORCID,McDonough Barbara1ORCID,Johnson Renee56ORCID,Lakdawala Neal K.7ORCID,Roberts Amy8ORCID,Barton Paul J.R.910ORCID,Cook Stuart A.9111213ORCID,Fatkin Diane5614ORCID,Seidman Christine E.1157ORCID,Seidman J.G.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics (P.N.P., K.I., J.A.L.W., A.H., M.Y.J., J.M.G., S.R.D., L.L., B.M., C.E.S., J.G.S.), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

2. Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital (P.N.P., A.H., M.Y.J.), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

3. Laboratory for Cardiovascular Genomics and Informatics, RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences, Yokohama, Japan (K.I.).

4. Laboratory for Molecular Medicine, Partners Healthcare Personalized Medicine, Cambridge, MA (A.H.).

5. Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, Darlinghurst (R.J., D.F.).

6. Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney, Kensington, NSW, Australia (R.J., D.F.).

7. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital (N.K.L., C.E.S.).

8. Department of Cardiology, Boston Children’s Hospital, MA (A.R.).

9. National Heart and Lung Institute (P.J.R.B., S.A.C.).

10. Cardiovascular Research Centre, Royal Brompton and Harefield Hospitals, London, United Kingdom (P.J.R.B.).

11. MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences, Imperial College London (S.A.C.).

12. Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disorders Program, Duke-National University of Singapore Medical School (S.A.C.).

13. National Heart Research Institute Singapore, National Heart Centre Singapore (S.A.C.).

14. Cardiology Department, St Vincent’s Hospital, Darlinghurst, NSW, Australia (D.F.).

15. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (C.E.S.), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

Abstract

Background: Heterozygous TTN truncating variants cause 10% to 20% of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Although variants which disrupt canonical splice signals (ie, invariant dinucleotide of the splice donor site, invariant dinucleotide of the splice acceptor site) at exon-intron junctions are readily recognized as TTN truncating variants, the effects of other nearby sequence variations on splicing and their contribution to disease is uncertain. Methods: Rare variants of unknown significance located in the splice regions of highly expressed TTN exons from 203 DCM cases, 3329 normal subjects, and clinical variant databases were identified. The effects of these variants on splicing were assessed using an in vitro splice assay. Results: Splice-altering variants of unknown significance were enriched in DCM cases over controls and present in 2% of DCM patients ( P =0.002). Application of this method to clinical variant databases demonstrated 20% of similar variants of unknown significance in TTN splice regions affect splicing. Noncanonical splice-altering variants were most frequently located at position +5 of the donor site ( P =4.4×10 7 ) and position -3 of the acceptor site ( P =0.002). SpliceAI, an emerging in silico prediction tool, had a high positive predictive value (86%–95%) but poor sensitivity (15%–50%) for the detection of splice-altering variants. Alternate exons spliced out of most TTN transcripts frequently lacked the consensus base at +5 donor and −3 acceptor positions. Conclusions: Noncanonical splice-altering variants in TTN explain 1-2% of DCM and offer a 10-20% increase in the diagnostic power of TTN sequencing in this disease. These data suggest rules that may improve efforts to detect splice-altering variants in other genes and may explain the low percent splicing observed for many alternate TTN exons.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine

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