Cells (Jul 2024)

Investigating Splice Defects in <i>USH2A</i> Using Targeted Long-Read Sequencing

  • Shwetha Chandrasekhar,
  • Siying Lin,
  • Neringa Jurkute,
  • Kathryn Oprych,
  • Leire Estramiana Elorrieta,
  • Elena Schiff,
  • Samantha Malka,
  • Genevieve Wright,
  • Michel Michaelides,
  • Omar A. Mahroo,
  • Andrew R. Webster,
  • Gavin Arno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13151261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 15
p. 1261

Abstract

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Biallelic variants in USH2A are associated with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and Type 2 Usher Syndrome (USH2), leading to impaired vision and, additionally, hearing loss in the latter. Although the introduction of next-generation sequencing into clinical diagnostics has led to a significant uplift in molecular diagnostic rates, many patients remain molecularly unsolved. It is thought that non-coding variants or variants of uncertain significance contribute significantly to this diagnostic gap. This study aims to demonstrate the clinical utility of the reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)–Oxford Nanopore Technology (ONT) sequencing of USH2A mRNA transcripts from nasal epithelial cells to determine the splice-altering effect of candidate variants. Five affected individuals with USH2 or non-syndromic RP who had undergone whole genome sequencing were recruited for further investigation. All individuals had uncertain genotypes in USH2A, including deep intronic rare variants, c.8682-654C>G, c.9055+389G>A, and c.9959-2971C>T; a synonymous variant of uncertain significance, c.2139C>T; p.(Gly713=); and a predicted loss of function duplication spanning an intron/exon boundary, c.3812-3_3837dup p.(Met1280Ter). In silico assessment using SpliceAI provided splice-altering predictions for all candidate variants which were investigated using ONT sequencing. All predictions were found to be accurate; however, in the case of c.3812-3_3837dup, the outcome was a complex cryptic splicing pattern with predominant in-frame exon 18 skipping and a low level of exon 18 inclusion leading to the predicted stop gain. This study detected and functionally characterised simple and complex mis-splicing patterns in USH2A arising from previously unknown deep intronic variants and previously reported variants of uncertain significance, confirming the pathogenicity of the variants.

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