作者
Claude Houdayer,Virginie Caux‐Moncoutier,Sophie Krieger,Michel Barrois,Françoise Bonnet,Violaine Bourdon,Myriam Bronner,Monique Buisson,Florence Coulet,Pascaline Gaildrat,Cédrick Lefol,Mélanie Léoné,Sylvie Mazoyer,Danielle Muller,Audrey Remenieras,Françoise Révillion,Étienne Rouleau,Joanna Sokołowska,Jean‐Philippe Vert,Rosette Lidereau,Florent Soubrier,Hagay Sobol,Nicolas Sévenet,Brigitte Bressac‐de Paillerets,Agnès Hardouin,Mario Tosi,Olga M. Sinilnikova,Dominique Stoppa‐Lyonnet
摘要
Assessing the impact of variants of unknown significance (VUS) on splicing is a key issue in molecular diagnosis. This impact can be predicted by in silico tools, but proper evaluation and user guidelines are lacking. To fill this gap, we embarked upon the largest BRCA1 and BRCA2 splice study to date by testing 272 VUSs (327 analyses) within the BRCA splice network of Unicancer. All these VUSs were analyzed by using six tools (splice site prediction by neural network, splice site finder (SSF), MaxEntScan (MES), ESE finder, relative enhancer and silencer classification by unanimous enrichment, and human splicing finder) and the predictions obtained were compared with transcript analysis results. Combining MES and SSF gave 96% sensitivity and 83% specificity for VUSs occurring in the vicinity of consensus splice sites, that is, the surrounding 11 and 14 bases for the 5′ and 3′ sites, respectively. This study was also an opportunity to define guidelines for transcript analysis along with a tentative classification of splice variants. The guidelines drawn from this large series should be useful for the whole community, particularly in the context of growing sequencing capacities that require robust pipelines for variant interpretation. Hum Mutat 33:1228–1238, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.