4.5 Article

Classification of Rare Missense Substitutions, Using Risk Surfaces, With Genetic- and Molecular-Epidemiology Applications

Journal

HUMAN MUTATION
Volume 29, Issue 11, Pages 1342-1354

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/humu.20896

Keywords

BRCA1; BRCA2; Align-GVGD; unclassified variant; missense substitution; protein multiple sequence alignment

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  2. Mayo Clinic Breast Cancer SPORE [P50 CA116201]

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Many individually rare missense substitutions are encountered during deep resequencing of candidate susceptibility genes and clinical mutation screening of known susceptibility genes. BRCA1 and BRCA2 are among the most resequenced of all genes, and clinical mutation screening of these genes provides an extensive data set for analysis of rare missense substitutions. Align-GVGD is a mathematically simple missense substitution analysis algorithm, based on the Grantham difference, which has already contributed to classification of missense substitutions in BRCA1, BRCA2, and CHEK2. However, the distribution of genetic risk as a function of Align-GVGD's output variables Grantham variation (GV) and Grantham deviation (GD) has not been well characterized. Here, we used data from the Myriad Genetic Laboratories database of nearly 70,000 full-sequence tests plus two risk estimates, one approximating the odds ratio and the other reflecting strength of selection, to display the distribution of risk in the GV-GD plane as a series of surfaces. We abstracted contours from the surfaces and used the contours to define a sequence of missense substitution grades ordered from greatest risk to least risk. The grades were validated internally using a third, personal and family history-based, measure of risk. The Align-GVGD grades defined here are applicable to both the genetic epidemiology problem of classifying rare missense substitutions observed in known susceptibility genes and the molecular epidemiology problem of analyzing rare missense substitutions observed during case-control mutation screening studies of candidate susceptibility genes. Hum Mutat 29(11), 1342-1354, 2008. (C) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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