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A novel de novo splicing mutation c.1444‐2A>T in the TSC2 gene causes exon skipping and premature termination in a patient with tuberous sclerosis syndrome
Author(s) -
Abdelwahed Mayssa,
Touraine Renaud,
BenRhouma Bochra,
Dhieb Dhoha,
Mars Manel,
Kammoun Khawla,
Hachicha Jamil,
Triki Chahnez,
Kamoun Hassen,
KeskesAmmar Leila,
Belguith Neila
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iubmb life
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.132
H-Index - 113
eISSN - 1521-6551
pISSN - 1521-6543
DOI - 10.1002/iub.2134
Subject(s) - exon , tuberous sclerosis , sanger sequencing , rna splicing , biology , intron , tsc2 , mutation , genetics , gene isoform , alternative splicing , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , medicine , pathology , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , apoptosis , rna
Abstract Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) syndrome is a neurocutaneous syndrome that affects the brain, skin, and kidneys that has an adverse impact on the patient's health and quality of life. There have been several recent advances that elucidate the genetic complex of this disorder that will help understand the basic neurobiology of this disorder. We report a Tunisian patient with clinical manifestations of TSC syndrome. We investigated the causative molecular defect in this patient using PCR followed by direct sequencing. Subsequently, in silico studies and mRNA analysis were performed to study the pathogenicity of the new variation found in the TSC2 . Bioinformatics tools predicted that the novel mutation c.1444‐2A>T have pathogenic effects on splicing machinery. RT‐PCR followed by sequencing revealed that the mutation c.1444‐2A>T generates two aberrant transcripts. The first, with exon 15 skipping, is responsible for the loss of 52 amino acids, which causes the production of an aberrant protein isoform. The second, with the inclusion of 122 nucleotides of intron 14, is responsible for the creation of new premature termination codons (TGA), which causes the production of a truncated TSC2 protein. This study highlighted the clinical features of a Tunisian patient with TSC syndrome and revealed a splicing mutation c.1444‐2A>T within intron 14 of TSC2 gene, which is present for the first time using Sanger sequencing approach, as a disease‐causing mutation in a Tunisian patient with TSC syndrome.

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