4.7 Article

PDIVAS: Pathogenicity predictor for Deep-Intronic Variants causing Aberrant Splicing

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-023-09645-2

Keywords

Pathogenicity prediction; RNA splicing; Deep intron; Non-coding region; Genomics; Machine learning; Variant interpretation

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PDIVAS is a tool for detecting disease-causing deep-intronic variants, trained using ensemble machine learning algorithms with high precision and maximum MCC value. In genome sequencing analysis, PDIVAS prioritizes pathogenic variants more efficiently than previous predictors.
BackgroundDeep-intronic variants that alter RNA splicing were ineffectively evaluated in the search for the cause of genetic diseases. Determination of such pathogenic variants from a vast number of deep-intronic variants (approximately 1,500,000 variants per individual) represents a technical challenge to researchers. Thus, we developed a Pathogenicity predictor for Deep-Intronic Variants causing Aberrant Splicing (PDIVAS) to easily detect pathogenic deep-intronic variants.ResultsPDIVAS was trained on an ensemble machine-learning algorithm to classify pathogenic and benign variants in a curated dataset. The dataset consists of manually curated pathogenic splice-altering variants (SAVs) and commonly observed benign variants within deep introns. Splicing features and a splicing constraint metric were used to maximize the predictive sensitivity and specificity, respectively. PDIVAS showed an average precision of 0.92 and a maximum MCC of 0.88 in classifying these variants, which were the best of the previous predictors. When PDIVAS was applied to genome sequencing analysis on a threshold with 95% sensitivity for reported pathogenic SAVs, an average of 27 pathogenic candidates were extracted per individual. Furthermore, the causative variants in simulated patient genomes were more efficiently prioritized than the previous predictors.ConclusionIncorporating PDIVAS into variant interpretation pipelines will enable efficient detection of disease-causing deep-intronic SAVs and contribute to improving the diagnostic yield. PDIVAS is publicly available at https://github.com/shiro-kur/PDIVAS.

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