Abstract

High throughput sequencing technologies have revolutionized the identification of mutations responsible for a diverse set of Mendelian disorders, including inherited retinal disorders (IRDs). However, the causal mutations remain elusive for a significant proportion of patients. This may be partially due to pathogenic mutations located in non-coding regions, which are largely missed by capture sequencing targeting the coding regions. The advent of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) allows us to systematically detect non-coding variations. However, the interpretation of these variations remains a significant bottleneck. In this study, we investigated the contribution of deep-intronic splice variants to IRDs. WGS was performed for a cohort of 571 IRD patients who lack a confident molecular diagnosis, and potential deep intronic variants that affect proper splicing were identified using SpliceAI. A total of six deleterious deep intronic variants were identified in eight patients. An in vitro minigene system was applied to further validate the effect of these variants on the splicing pattern of the associated genes. The prediction scores assigned to splice-site disruption positively correlated with the impact of mutations on splicing, as those with lower prediction scores demonstrated partial splicing. Through this study, we estimated the contribution of deep-intronic splice mutations to unassigned IRD patients and leveraged in silico and in vitro methods to establish a framework for prioritizing deep intronic variant candidates for mechanistic and functional analyses.

Highlights

  • Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a diverse set of Mendelian disorders that are clinically heterogeneous and are a major cause of inherited blindness

  • We evaluated the contribution of deep-intronic splicing variants in known retinal disease genes in unsolved IRD cases

  • We focused on the contribution of deep-intronic variants that disrupt splicing to diseases of 571 patients diagnosed with IRDs but had no molecular diagnosis by conventional clinical molecular diagnostic approaches, which provide information restricted to the protein-coding exons and exon-intron boundaries

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Summary

Introduction

Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a diverse set of Mendelian disorders that are clinically heterogeneous and are a major cause of inherited blindness. They are caused by the progressive deterioration or the early loss of cells fundamental for the normal function of the retina (den Hollander et al, 2010). Decades of studies have illustrated the genetic basis of IRDs by revealing mutations in over 200 genes (Ellingford et al, 2016). We evaluated the contribution of deep-intronic splicing variants in known retinal disease genes in unsolved IRD cases

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