Abstract

AbstractFanconi anemia (FA) is a hereditary, DNA repair deficiency disorder caused by pathogenic variants in any 1 of 22 known genes (FANCA-FANCW). Variants in FANCA account for nearly two-thirds of all patients with FA. Clinical presentation of FA can be heterogeneous and include congenital abnormalities, progressive bone marrow failure, and predisposition to cancer. Here, we describe a relatively mild disease manifestation among 6 individuals diagnosed with FA, each compound heterozygous for 1 established pathogenic FANCA variant and 1 FANCA exon 36 variant, c.3624C>T. These individuals had delayed onset of hematological abnormalities, increased survival, reduced incidence of cancer, and improved fertility. Although predicted to encode a synonymous change (p.Ser1208=), the c.3624C>T variant causes a splicing error resulting in a FANCA transcript missing the last 4 base pairs of exon 36. Deep sequencing and quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed that 6% to 10% of the FANCA transcripts included the canonical splice product, which generated wild-type FANCA protein. Consistently, functional analysis of cell lines from the studied individuals revealed presence of residual FANCD2 ubiquitination and FANCD2 foci formation, better cell survival, and decreased late S/G2 accumulation in response to DNA interstrand cross-linking agent, indicating presence of residual activity of the FA repair pathway. Thus, the c.3624C>T variant is a hypomorphic allele, which contributes to delayed manifestation of FA disease phenotypes in individuals with at least 1 c.3624C>T allele.

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