NM_002485.5(NBN):c.657_661del (p.Lys219fs) AND Microcephaly, normal intelligence and immunodeficiency
- Germline classification:
- Pathogenic (21 submissions)
- Last evaluated:
- Feb 1, 2024
- Review status:
- 2 stars out of maximum of 4 starscriteria provided, multiple submitters, no conflicts
- Somatic classification
of clinical impact: - None
- Review status:
- (0/4) 0 stars out of maximum of 4 starsno assertion criteria provided
- Somatic classification
of oncogenicity: - None
- Review status:
- (0/4) 0 stars out of maximum of 4 starsno assertion criteria provided
- Record status:
- current
- Accession:
- RCV000007353.53
Allele description [Variation Report for NM_002485.5(NBN):c.657_661del (p.Lys219fs)]
NM_002485.5(NBN):c.657_661del (p.Lys219fs)
- Gene:
- NBN:nibrin [Gene - OMIM - HGNC]
- Variant type:
- Deletion
- Cytogenetic location:
- 8q21.3
- Genomic location:
- Preferred name:
- NM_002485.5(NBN):c.657_661del (p.Lys219fs)
- Other names:
- 657del5
- HGVS:
- NC_000008.10:g.90983445_90983449delGTTTT
- NC_000008.11:g.89971217_89971221del
- NG_008860.1:g.18454_18458del
- NM_001024688.3:c.411_415del
- NM_002485.5:c.657_661delMANE SELECT
- NP_001019859.1:p.Lys137fs
- NP_002476.2:p.Lys219fs
- LRG_158:g.18454_18458del
- NC_000008.10:g.90983442_90983446del
- NC_000008.10:g.90983442_90983446delTTTGT
- NC_000008.10:g.90983445_90983449del
- NC_000008.10:g.90983445_90983449del
- NC_000008.10:g.90983445_90983449delGTTTT
- NM_002485.4:c.657_661delACAAA
- NM_002485.5:c.657_661delACAAAMANE SELECT
- NP_002476.2:p.Lys219AsnfsTer15
- p.K219NFS*16
- p.K219NfsX16
- p.Lys219AsnfsX16
This HGVS expression did not pass validation- Protein change:
- K137fs
- Links:
- OMIM: 602667.0001; dbSNP: rs587776650
- NCBI 1000 Genomes Browser:
- rs587776650
- Molecular consequence:
- NM_001024688.3:c.411_415del - frameshift variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001589]
- NM_002485.5:c.657_661del - frameshift variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001589]
- Observations:
- 1
Condition(s)
- Name:
- Microcephaly, normal intelligence and immunodeficiency (NBS)
- Synonyms:
- IMMUNODEFICIENCY, MICROCEPHALY, AND CHROMOSOMAL INSTABILITY; SEEMANOVA SYNDROME II; Nijmegen breakage syndrome; See all synonyms [MedGen]
- Identifiers:
- MONDO: MONDO:0009623; MedGen: C0398791; Orphanet: 647; OMIM: 251260
-
RNA polymerase beta subunit, partial [Streptococcus downei MFe28]
RNA polymerase beta subunit, partial [Streptococcus downei MFe28]gi|75037275|gb|ABA12477.1|Protein
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See more...Assertion and evidence details
Submission Accession | Submitter | Review Status (Assertion method) | Clinical Significance (Last evaluated) | Origin | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SCV000027552 | OMIM | no assertion criteria provided | Pathogenic (Oct 15, 2008) | unknown | literature only | |
SCV000218835 | Labcorp Genetics (formerly Invitae), Labcorp | criteria provided, single submitter (Invitae Variant Classification Sherloc (09022015)) | Pathogenic (Jan 29, 2024) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV000248141 | Genetic Services Laboratory, University of Chicago | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Mar 4, 2015) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV000256868 | Miami Human Genetics, University Of Miami Miller School Of Medicine - Miami Human Genetics | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Nov 16, 2015) | germline | research | |
SCV000494627 | GeneReviews | no classification provided | not provided | germline | literature only | |
SCV000678042 | Counsyl | criteria provided, single submitter (Counsyl Autosomal and X-linked Recessive Disease Classification criteria (2015)) | Pathogenic (Jun 13, 2015) | unknown | clinical testing | |
SCV000697978 | Women's Health and Genetics/Laboratory Corporation of America, LabCorp | criteria provided, single submitter (LabCorp Variant Classification Summary - May 2015) | Pathogenic (Nov 25, 2015) | germline | clinical testing | PubMed (2) LabCorp Variant Classification Summary - May 2015.docx, |
SCV000838310 | Mendelics | criteria provided, single submitter (Mendelics Assertion Criteria 2017) | Pathogenic (Jul 2, 2018) | unknown | clinical testing | |
SCV001163582 | Baylor Genetics | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV001365920 | Laboratory for Molecular Medicine, Mass General Brigham Personalized Medicine | criteria provided, single submitter (LMM Criteria) | Pathogenic (May 8, 2019) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV001366157 | Centre for Mendelian Genomics, University Medical Centre Ljubljana | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Oct 12, 2018) | unknown | clinical testing | |
SCV001460733 | Natera, Inc. | no assertion criteria provided | Pathogenic (Sep 16, 2020) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV001478131 | Department of Pediatrics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Dec 15, 2020) | germline | research | |
SCV001737447 | St. Jude Molecular Pathology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital | criteria provided, single submitter (St. Jude Assertion Criteria 2020) | Pathogenic (Sep 28, 2022) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV002045955 | Genome-Nilou Lab | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Nov 7, 2021) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV002568311 | Greenwood Genetic Center Diagnostic Laboratories, Greenwood Genetic Center | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Apr 27, 2022) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV002573068 | 3billion | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Sep 1, 2022) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV002573431 | Clinic of Clinical Immunology with Stem Cell Bank, Expert Centre for Rare Diseases - PID, University Hospital "Alexandrovska" | no assertion criteria provided | Pathogenic (May 1, 2022) | germline | clinical testing | |
SCV004027783 | Institute of Human Genetics, University of Leipzig Medical Center | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (May 5, 2023) | maternal | clinical testing | |
SCV005051878 | Laboratory of Medical Genetics, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic (Feb 1, 2024) | germline | curation | |
SCV005326336 | Seattle Children's Hospital Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Seattle Children's Hospital | criteria provided, single submitter (ACMG Guidelines, 2015) | Pathogenic | germline | clinical testing |
Summary from all submissions
Ethnicity | Origin | Affected | Individuals | Families | Chromosomes tested | Number Tested | Family history | Method |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
not provided | germline | unknown | 1 | 1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing |
not provided | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | literature only |
not provided | germline | no | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing, research, curation |
not provided | germline | yes | 1 | not provided | not provided | 1 | not provided | clinical testing, research |
not provided | maternal | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing |
not provided | unknown | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing |
not provided | unknown | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing |
Slavic | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | literature only |
Citations
PubMed
Positional cloning of the gene for Nijmegen breakage syndrome.
Matsuura S, Tauchi H, Nakamura A, Kondo N, Sakamoto S, Endo S, Smeets D, Solder B, Belohradsky BH, Der Kaloustian VM, Oshimura M, Isomura M, Nakamura Y, Komatsu K.
Nat Genet. 1998 Jun;19(2):179-81.
- PMID:
- 9620777
Carlomagno F, Chang-Claude J, Dunning AM, Ponder BA.
Genes Chromosomes Cancer. 1999 Aug;25(4):393-5.
- PMID:
- 10398434
Details of each submission
From OMIM, SCV000027552.4
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | literature only | PubMed (11) |
Description
In patients of Slavic origin with Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS; 251260), Varon et al. (1998) identified a common deletion of 5 nucleotides in exon 6 of the NBS1 gene (657del5), resulting in a frameshift and a truncated protein. A total of 46 patients homozygous for this mutation were identified. The mutation was found exclusively on a specific 'Slavic' haplotype of linked polymorphic markers.
Matsuura et al. (1998) found the same 5-bp deletion in the NBS1 gene in 13 NBS patients of Slavic or German origin. Twelve patients were homozygous for the deletion and 1 was heterozygous. The deletion introduced a premature termination signal at codon 218, which was predicted to result in a severely truncated polypeptide. Matsuura et al. (1998) concluded that they had identified the gene involved in NBS because complementation was effected by a YAC that contained the gene and because no (or extremely reduced) expression of the gene was found in a patient without the deletion but with the NBS phenotype. The presence of a founder mutation in 13 of 14 cases, with no demonstration of the deletion in 50 normal individuals of the same ethnic origin or in 7 normal chromosomes from NBS parents, supported this conclusion.
The truncating 657del5 had been identified in 90% of NBS patients. NBS shares a number of features with ataxia-telangiectasia (208900), the most notable being high sensitivity to ionizing radiation and predisposition to cancer. Patients who are heterozygous for the ATM mutation are predisposed to breast cancer. Since the NBS phenotype at the cellular level is very similar to that of ataxia-telangiectasia, Carlomagno et al. (1999) screened 477 German breast cancer patients, aged under 51 years, and 866 matched controls for the common NBS mutation. They identified 1 carrier among the cases and 1 among the controls, indicating that the population frequency of this NBS mutation is 1 in 866 persons (95% CI = 1 in 34,376 to 1 in 156) and the estimated prevalence of NBS is thus 1 in 3 million persons. The proportion of breast cancer attributable to this mutation is less than 1%.
Kleier et al. (2000) reported a 5-year-old Bosnian boy with severe microcephaly. Because of multiple structural aberrations involving chromosomes 7 and 14 typical for ataxia-telangiectasia, that disorder was diagnosed. However, the diagnosis of NBS was suggested by the boy's remarkable microcephaly, his facial appearance, and the absence of ataxia and telangiectasia. DNA analysis demonstrated homozygosity for the major mutation in the NBS1 gene, 657del5.
Maser et al. (2001) tested the hypothesis that the NBS1 657del5 mutation is a hypomorphic defect. They showed that NBS cells harboring the 657del5 mutation contained a predicted 26-kD N-terminal protein, NBS1(p26), and a 70-kD NBS1 protein, NBS1(p70), lacking the native N terminus. The 26-kD protein is not physically associated with the MRE11 complex (600814), whereas the 70-kD species is physically associated with it. NBS1(p70) is produced by internal translation initiation within the NBS mRNA using an open reading frame generated by the 657del5 frameshift. Maser et al. (2001) proposed that the common NBS1 allele encodes a partially functional protein that diminishes the severity of the NBS phenotype.
Tekin et al. (2002) reported a consanguineous Turkish family whose first son died of anal atresia and whose second son, the proband, presented with severe pre- and postnatal growth retardation as well as striking microcephaly, immunodeficiency, congenital heart disease, chromosome instability, and rhabdomyosarcoma in the anal region. The patient was homozygous for the 657del5 mutation in the NBS1 gene, which is responsible for NBS in most Slavic populations. The family was the first diagnosed with NBS in the Turkish population and was one of the most severely affected examples of the syndrome.
Drabek et al. (2002) presented PCR with sequence specific primers as a method for detection of the 657del5 mutation. They confirmed a high carrier frequency in the Czech population (1 in 106 persons; 95% CI = 1 in 331 to 1 in 46).
In Russian children, Resnick et al. (2003) screened for the 657del5 NBS1 mutation in 548 controls and 68 patients with lymphoid malignancies. No carrier of the mutation was found in the control group. The mutation was found in heterozygous form in 2 of the 68 patients from the group of lymphoid malignancies, 1 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (see 159555) and 1 with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (605027). Several relatives of the patient with non-Hodgkin lymphoma who carried the same mutation had cancer (acute lymphoblastic leukemia, breast cancer, gastrointestinal cancers), suggesting that heterozygosity may predispose to malignant disorders.
In monozygotic twin brothers with a severe form of NBS without chromosomal instability, Seemanova et al. (2006) identified compound heterozygosity for the 657del5 mutation and a 643C-T transition in exon 6 of the NBS1 gene, resulting in an arg215-to-trp (R215W) substitution (602667.0009). Both infants showed reduced expression of full-length nibrin, and radiation response processes were strongly reduced in their cells. Their mother and father were heterozygous for the 657del5 mutation and the R215W mutation, respectively, as were their respective grandfathers.
In a 3-month-old boy with NBS, Varon et al. (2007) identified homozygosity for the 657del5 mutation; the patient's mother carried the mutation, whereas his father was homozygous for the wildtype allele. Analysis of 27 microsatellite markers covering all of chromosome 8 revealed that the patient had a homozygous haplotype for all of the markers, whereas the mother carried the same haplotype in heterozygous state. The authors stated that this was the first patient with NBS due to maternal isodisomy of chromosome 8.
Porhanova et al. (2008) reported a 52-year-old Russian woman with ovarian cancer (see 604370) who was found to be compound heterozygous for a mutation in the BRCA1 gene (113705.0018) and the common Slavic 657del5 mutation in the NBN gene. Investigation of the ovarian cancer tissue showed somatic loss of heterozygosity for NBN, but retention of heterozygosity for BRCA1. The patient did not have a particularly severe cancer-prone phenotype, and her parents did not have cancer, although 3 sibs developed cancer as adults. Porhanova et al. (2008) commented that haploinsufficiency of the BRCA1 gene may contribute to cancer progression without somatic changes.
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Labcorp Genetics (formerly Invitae), Labcorp, SCV000218835.14
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (10) |
Description
This sequence change creates a premature translational stop signal (p.Lys219Asnfs*16) in the NBN gene. While this is not anticipated to result in nonsense mediated decay, it is expected to disrupt the last 536 amino acid(s) of the NBN protein. This variant is present in population databases (rs587776650, gnomAD 0.04%). This premature translational stop signal has been observed in individual(s) with NBN-related conditions (PMID: 14973119, 15185344, 18606567, 19908051, 24113799). It is commonly reported in individuals of Slavic ancestry (PMID: 9590180). This variant is also known as 657del5. ClinVar contains an entry for this variant (Variation ID: 6940). Algorithms developed to predict the effect of variants on protein structure and function are not available or were not evaluated for this variant. Experimental studies have shown that this premature translational stop signal affects NBN function (PMID: 16033915, 22131123, 22941933). For these reasons, this variant has been classified as Pathogenic.
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Genetic Services Laboratory, University of Chicago, SCV000248141.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Miami Human Genetics, University Of Miami Miller School Of Medicine - Miami Human Genetics, SCV000256868.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | research | PubMed (1) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From GeneReviews, SCV000494627.2
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Slavic | not provided | not provided | not provided | literature only | PubMed (6) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Counsyl, SCV000678042.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (7) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | unknown | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Women's Health and Genetics/Laboratory Corporation of America, LabCorp, SCV000697978.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (2) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Mendelics, SCV000838310.2
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | not provided |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | unknown | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Baylor Genetics, SCV001163582.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Laboratory for Molecular Medicine, Mass General Brigham Personalized Medicine, SCV001365920.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | 1 | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (6) |
Description
The p.Lys219AsnfsX16 variant in NBN is the most common NBN variant associated with autosomal recessive Nijmegen Breakage Syndrome (NBS) and has been reported as a founder variant in Slavic populations (Varon 1998). Additionally, in the heterozygous state, this variant has been found to increase risk to certain NBS-related cancers (Gao 2013, Zhang 2012). It has also been identified in 52/128774 European chromosomes by gnomAD (http://gnomad.broadinstitute.org). However, this frequency is low enough to be consistent with a recessive carrier frequency. This variant has also been reported in ClinVar (Variation ID: 6940). This variant is predicted to cause a frameshift, which alters the protein’s amino acid sequence beginning at position 219 and leads to a premature termination codon 16 amino acids downstream. This alteration is then predicted to lead to a truncated or absent protein. Loss of function of the NBN gene is an established disease mechanism in autosomal recessive NBS. In vitro functional studies support an impact on protein function and show that this variant leads to the production of an abnormal protein product (Maser 2001, Dzikiewicz-Krawczyk 2012). In summary, this variant meets criteria to be classified as pathogenic for autosomal recessive NBS. ACMG/AMP criteria applied: PVS1, PM3_VeryStrong, PS3_Supporting.
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | 1 | not provided | 1 | not provided |
From Centre for Mendelian Genomics, University Medical Centre Ljubljana, SCV001366157.2
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
Description
This variant was classified as: Pathogenic. The following ACMG criteria were applied in classifying this variant: PVS1,PS1,PM2.
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | unknown | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Natera, Inc., SCV001460733.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | not provided |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Department of Pediatrics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, SCV001478131.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | research | PubMed (2) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | no | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From St. Jude Molecular Pathology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, SCV001737447.3
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | not provided |
Description
The NBN c.657_661del (p.Lys219fs) change deletes five nucleotides and causes a frameshift and the creation of a premature stop codon. This change is predicted to cause protein truncation or absence of the protein due to nonsense mediated decay. This variant has a maximum subpopulation frequency of 0.040% in gnomAD v2.1.1 (https://gnomad.broadinstitute.org/). This is the most common pathogenic variant reported in individuals affected with Nijmegen breakage syndrome (PMID: 9590180, 20301355). In addition, this variant has been identified as heterozygous in individuals with many cancer types including breast, lymphoma, prostate, melanoma, medulloblastoma, and others (PMID: 15185344, 14973119, 18606567, 19908051, 24113799). Case-control studies have demonstrated evidence of association with breast cancer (OR = 2.63), prostate cancer (OR = 5.87), and lymphoma (OR = 2.93) (PMID: 23317186, 24113799). This variant is present 5x in the FLOSSIES database which contains genetic variants from women older than 70 years of age who have never had cancer (https://whi.color.com/). In summary, this variant meets criteria to be classified as pathogenic.
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Genome-Nilou Lab, SCV002045955.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | no | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Greenwood Genetic Center Diagnostic Laboratories, Greenwood Genetic Center, SCV002568311.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
Description
PVS1, PS3, PM3
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From 3billion, SCV002573068.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | 1 | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (2) |
Description
The variant is observed at an extremely low frequency in the gnomAD v2.1.1 dataset (total allele frequency: 0.020%). It is predicted to result in a loss or disruption of normal protein function through nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) or protein truncation. Multiple pathogenic variants are reported downstream of the variant. The variant has been reported at least twice as pathogenic with clinical assertions and evidence for the classification (ClinVar ID: VCV000006940 / PMID: 9590180). Therefore, this variant is classified as Pathogenic according to the recommendation of ACMG/AMP guideline.
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | yes | 1 | not provided | not provided | 1 | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Clinic of Clinical Immunology with Stem Cell Bank, Expert Centre for Rare Diseases - PID, University Hospital "Alexandrovska", SCV002573431.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | not provided |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Institute of Human Genetics, University of Leipzig Medical Center, SCV004027783.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
Description
Criteria applied: PVS1,PS3,PS4,PM2_SUP
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | maternal | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Laboratory of Medical Genetics, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, SCV005051878.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | curation | PubMed (1) |
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | no | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
From Seattle Children's Hospital Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Seattle Children's Hospital, SCV005326336.1
# | Ethnicity | Individuals | Chromosomes Tested | Family History | Method | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | clinical testing | PubMed (1) |
Description
The p.Lys219Asnfs*16 variant is predicted to substitute the lysine at amino acid position 219 with an asparagine followed by a premature termination codon after 16 amino acids. This is predicted to result in decreased function of the NBN protein due to a truncated or absent gene product. The p.Lys219Asnfs*16 variant is a known founder variant among individuals of Slavic ancestry and has been reported many times in the homozygous state in affected individuals (PMID: 9590180, 11093281, 29419426 and others). The p.Lys219Asnfs*16 variant accounts for approximately 100% of pathogenic alleles in individuals from Poland, Czech Republic, and Ukraine and for 70% of pathogenic alleles in the United States. It is estimated that the carrier frequency of the p.Lys219Asnfs*16 variant is as high as 1 in 154 individuals of Slavic origin but varies by region (PMID: 11093281).
# | Sample | Method | Observation | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences | |
1 | germline | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |
Last Updated: Nov 3, 2024