JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Deep Intronic PAH Variants Explain Missing Heritability in Hyperphenylalaninemia.

Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) deficiency or phenylketonuria (PKU) is the most common cause of hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA), and approximately 5% of patients remain genetically unsolved. Identifying deep intronic PAH variants may help improve their molecular diagnostic rate. Next-generation sequencing was utilized to detect the whole PAH gene in 96 patients with genetically unsolved HPA from 2013 to 2022. The effects of deep intronic variants on pre-mRNA splicing were investigated by minigene-based assay. The allelic phenotype values of recurrent deep intronic variants were calculated. Twelve deep intronic PAH variants, located in intron 5 (c.509+434C>T), intron 6 (c.706+288T>G, c.706+519T>C, c.706+531T>C, c.706+535G>T, c.706+600A>C, c.706+603T>G, and c.706+608A>C), intron 10 (c.1065+241C>A and c.1065+258C>A), and intron 11 (c.1199+502A>T and c.1199+745T>A) were identified in 80.2% (77/96) patients. Ten of the 12 variants were novel, and they all generated pseudoexons in mRNA, leading to frameshift or lengthened proteins. The most prevalent deep intronic variant was c.1199+502A>T, followed by c.1065+241C>A, c.1065+258C>A, and c.706+531T>C. The metabolic phenotypes of the four variants were assigned as classic PKU, mild HPA, mild HPA, and mild PKU, respectively. The results suggest that deep intronic PAH variants improved the diagnostic rate from 95.3% to 99.3% in the overall patients with HPA. Our data demonstrate the importance of assessing noncoding variants in genetic diseases. Pseudoexon inclusion caused by deep intronic variants may represent a recurrent mechanism.

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