Functional assessment of potential splice site variants in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy

JA Groeneweg, A Ummels, M Mulder, H Bikker… - Heart Rhythm, 2014 - Elsevier
JA Groeneweg, A Ummels, M Mulder, H Bikker, JJ van der Smagt, AM van Mil, T Homfray…
Heart Rhythm, 2014Elsevier
Background Interpretation of genetic screening results in arrhythmogenic right ventricular
dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) often is difficult. Pathogenicity of variants with uncertain
clinical significance may be predicted by software algorithms. However, functional
assessment can unambiguously demonstrate the effect of such variants. Objective The
purpose of this study was to perform functional analysis of potential splice site variants in
ARVD/C patients. Methods Nine variants in desmosomal (PKP2, JUP, DSG2, DSC2) genes …
Background
Interpretation of genetic screening results in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) often is difficult. Pathogenicity of variants with uncertain clinical significance may be predicted by software algorithms. However, functional assessment can unambiguously demonstrate the effect of such variants.
Objective
The purpose of this study was to perform functional analysis of potential splice site variants in ARVD/C patients.
Methods
Nine variants in desmosomal (PKP2, JUP, DSG2, DSC2) genes with potential RNA splicing effect were analyzed. The variants were found in patients who fulfilled 2010 ARVD/C Task Force Criteria (n = 7) or had suspected ARVD/C (n = 2). Total RNA was isolated from fresh blood samples and subjected to reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction.
Results
An effect on splicing was predicted by software algorithms for all variants. Of the 9 variants, 5 were intronic and 4 exonic. RNA analysis showed a functional effect on mRNA splicing by exon skipping, generation of new splice sites, or activation of cryptic sites in 6 variants. All 5 intronic variants tested severely impaired splicing. Only 1 of 4 exonic potential splice site variants was shown to have a deleterious effect on splicing. The remaining 3 exonic variants had no detectable effect on splicing, and heterozygous presence in mRNA confirmed biallelic expression.
Conclusion
Six variants of uncertain clinical significance in the PKP2, JUP, and DSG2 genes showed a deleterious effect on mRNA splicing, indicating these are ARVD/C–related pathogenic splice site mutations. These results highlight the importance of functional assessment of potential splice site variants to improve patient care and facilitate cascade screening.
Elsevier