Premium
Re‐evaluating the pathogenicity of the c.783+2T>C BAP1 germline variant
Author(s) -
Goldberg Yael,
Laitman Yael,
Ben David Merav,
Bazak Lily,
Lidzbarsky Gabriel,
Salmon Lina B.,
ShkediRafid Shiri,
Barshack Iris,
Avivi Camila,
Darawshe Malak,
Shomron Noam,
Bruchim Revital,
Vinkler Chana,
Yannoukakos Drakoulis,
Fostira Florentia,
BernsteinMolho Rinat,
Friedman Eitan
Publication year - 2021
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.24189
Subject(s) - bap1 , biology , germline , genetics , penetrance , germline mutation , rna splicing , cancer research , medical genetics , mutation , gene , rna , phenotype
BAP1 germline pathogenic sequence variants (PSVs) underlie a unique tumor predisposition syndrome (BAP1‐TPDS) associated with an increased lifetime risk for developing primarily pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma and uveal and cutaneous melanoma. Overwhelmingly, BAP1 PSVs are unique, family‐specific inactivating variants. We identified seven families, six of Jewish Iraqi origin, harboring an identical BAP1 splice variant (c.783+2T>C), currently assigned a “likely pathogenic” status. Given a nonclassical BAP1‐TPDS tumor type clustering and low penetrance in these families, the pathogenicity of this variant was re‐evaluated by a combined approach including literature analysis, revised bioinformatics analysis, allelic loss, effect on the transcript, and tumor protein expression patterns. None of the three available tumors showed an allelic loss, there was no discernable effect on alternative splicing based on reverse‐transcription polymerase chain reaction, and there was no decrease or loss of somatic protein expression in 2/3 analyzed tumors. This led to assigning a Benign Strong (BS) criteria, BS4, supporting BS3 criteria, and weakening the Pathogenic Supporting (PP) criteria PP5. Combined, these data suggest that this sequence variant should be reclassified as a variant of unknown significance by American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) criteria.