A Leaky Deep Intronic Splice Variant in CLRN1 Is Associated with Non-Syndromic Retinitis Pigmentosa

Genes (Basel). 2024 Oct 24;15(11):1363. doi: 10.3390/genes15111363.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are clinically complex and genetically heterogeneous visual impairment disorders with varying penetrance and severity. Disease-causing variants in at least 289 nuclear and mitochondrial genes have been implicated in their pathogenesis.

METHODS: Whole exome sequencing results were analyzed using established pipelines and the results were further confirmed by Sanger sequencing and minigene splicing assay.

RESULTS: Exome sequencing in a 51-year-old Ashkenazi Jewish patient with non-syndromic retinitis pigmentosa (RP) identified compound heterozygous variants in the CLRN1 gene: a known pathogenic missense [p.(N48K)] and a novel deep intronic variant c.254-643G>T. A minigene splicing assay that was performed aiming to study the effect of the c.254-643G>T variant on CLRN1 pre-mRNA splicing revealed the inclusion of a pseudo-exon that was also reported to be included in the transcript due to an adjacent variant, c.254-649T>G. However, unlike the reported c.254-649T>G variant, c.254-643G>T showed aberrant splicing in a leaky manner, implying that the identified variant is not totally penetrant.

CONCLUSION: We report on a novel deep intronic variant in CLRN1 causing non-syndromic RP. The non-syndromic phenotype observed in this index case may be attributed to the leaky nature of this variant, which is causing some normal transcripts to be produced.

PMID:39596563 | DOI:10.3390/genes15111363