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Genome Annotation by Shotgun Inactivation of a Native Gene in Hemizygous Cells: Application to BRCA 2 with Implication of Hypomorphic Variants
Author(s) -
Ghosh Soma,
Bhunia Anil K.,
Paun Bogdan C.,
Gilbert Samuel F.,
Dhru Urmil,
Patel Kalpesh,
Kern Scott E.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
human mutation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 162
eISSN - 1098-1004
pISSN - 1059-7794
DOI - 10.1002/humu.22736
Subject(s) - biology , genetics , gene , missense mutation , mutation
The greatest interpretive challenge of modern medicine may be to functionally annotate the vast variation of human genomes. Demonstrating a proposed approach, we created a library of BRCA 2 exon 27 shotgun‐mutant plasmids including solitary and multiplex mutations to generate human knockin clones using homologous recombination. This 55‐mutation, 13‐clone syngeneic variance library ( S y V a L ) comprised severely affected clones having early‐stop nonsense mutations, functionally hypomorphic clones having multiple missense mutations emphasizing the potential to identify and assess hypomorphic mutations in novel proteomic and epidemiologic studies, and neutral clones having multiple missense mutations. Efficient coverage of nonessential amino acids was provided by mutation multiplexing. Severe mutations were distinguished from hypomorphic or neutral changes by chemosensitivity assays (hypersensitivity to mitomycin C and acetaldehyde), by analysis of RAD 51 focus formation, and by mitotic multipolarity. A multiplex unbiased approach of generating all‐human S y V a L s in medically important genes, with random mutations in native genes, would provide databases of variants that could be functionally annotated without concerns arising from exogenous c DNA constructs or interspecies interactions, as a basis for subsequent proteomic domain mapping or clinical calibration if desired. Such gene‐irrelevant approaches could be scaled up for multiple genes of clinical interest, providing distributable cellular libraries linked to public‐shared functional databases.