4.7 Article

Comprehensive evaluation and efficient classification of BRCA1 RING domain missense substitutions

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 109, Issue 6, Pages 1153-1174

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2022.05.004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [P30CA042014, R01CA121245]
  2. Canadian PERSPECTIVE I&I Project through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research [GP1-155865]
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FDN 14890]

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BRCA1 is a high-risk susceptibility gene for breast and ovarian cancer. This study focuses on the pathogenicity of missense substitutions in the RING domain of BRCA1. Through experimental assays and data integration, the researchers achieved clinical classification of observed missense substitutions and identified additional potential pathogenic and benign missense substitutions.
BRCA1 is a high-risk susceptibility gene for breast and ovarian cancer. Pathogenic protein-truncating variants are scattered across the open reading frame, but all known missense substitutions that are pathogenic because of missense dysfunction are located in either the amino-terminal RING domain or the carboxy-terminal BRCT domain. Heterodimerization of the BRCA1 and BARD1 RING domains is a molecularly defined obligate activity. Hence, we tested every BRCA1 RING domain missense substitution that can be created by a single nucleotide change for heterodimerization with BARD1 in a mammalian two-hybrid assay. Downstream of the laboratory assay, we addressed three additional challenges: assay calibration, validation thereof, and integration of the calibrated results with other available data, such as computational evidence and patient/population observational data to achieve clinically applicable classification. Overall, we found that 15%???20% of BRCA1 RING domain missense substitutions are pathogenic. Using a Bayesian point system for data integration and variant classification, we achieved clinical classification of 89% of observed missense substitutions. Moreover, among missense substitutions not present in the human observational data used here, we find an additional 45 with concordant computational and functional assay evidence in favor of pathogenicity plus 223 with concordant evidence in favor of benignity; these are particularly likely to be classified as likely pathogenic and likely benign, respectively, once human observational data become available.

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