Estimating the proportion of nonsense variants undergoing the newly described phenomenon of manufactured splice rescue

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Abstract

A recent report described a nonsense variant simultaneously creating a donor splice site, resulting in a truncated but functional protein. To explore the generalizability of this unique mechanism, we annotated >115,000 nonsense variants using SpliceAI. Between 0.61% (donor gain delta score >0.8, for high precision) and 2.57% (>0.2, for high sensitivity) of nonsense variants were predicted to create new donor splice sites at or upstream of the stop codon. These variants were less likely than other nonsense variants in the same genes to be classified as pathogenic/likely pathogenic in ClinVar (p < 0.001). Up to 1 in 175 nonsense variants were predicted to result in small in-frame deletions and loss-of-function evasion through this “manufactured splice rescue” mechanism. We urge caution when interpreting nonsense variants where manufactured splice rescue is a strong possibility and correlation with phenotype is challenging, as will often be the case with secondary findings and newborn genomic screening programs.

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APA

Haque, B., Cheerie, D., Birkadze, S., Xu, A. L., Nalpathamkalam, T., Thiruvahindrapuram, B., … Costain, G. (2024). Estimating the proportion of nonsense variants undergoing the newly described phenomenon of manufactured splice rescue. European Journal of Human Genetics, 32(2), 238–242. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-023-01495-6

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