Abstract
ABSTRACTThe vast majority of Chromosomal Instability (CIN) promoting mutations remain unknown. We assess the prevalence of Chromosomal Instability aiding Variants (CIVa) by collating Loss-of-Function (LoF) variants predicted in 135 chromosome segregation genes from over 150,000 humans, including consanguineous individuals. Surprisingly, we observe heterozygous and homozygous CIVa in Astrin and SKA3 genes that encode evolutionarily conserved microtubule-associated proteins essential for chromosome segregation. By combining high-resolution microscopy and controlled protein expression, we show the naturally occurring Astrin variant, p.Q1012*, as potentially harmful because it fails to localise normally, delays anaphase onset, induces chromosome misalignment and promotes chromosome missegregation. We show that N-terminal frameshift variants in Astrin and SKA3 are likely to generate shorter isoforms that do not compromise chromosome segregation revealing resilient mechanisms to cope with harmful variants. This study provides a framework to predict and stratify naturally occurring CIVa, an important step towards precision medicine for CIN syndromes.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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