U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

NM_000527.5(LDLR):c.1586+5G>A AND not provided

Germline classification:
Conflicting interpretations of pathogenicity (3 submissions)
Last evaluated:
Mar 27, 2023
Review status:
criteria provided, conflicting classifications
Somatic classification
of clinical impact:
None
Review status:
(0/4) 0 stars out of maximum of 4 stars
no assertion criteria provided
Somatic classification
of oncogenicity:
None
Review status:
(0/4) 0 stars out of maximum of 4 stars
no assertion criteria provided
Record status:
current
Accession:
RCV000587894.7

Allele description [Variation Report for NM_000527.5(LDLR):c.1586+5G>A]

NM_000527.5(LDLR):c.1586+5G>A

Gene:
LDLR:low density lipoprotein receptor [Gene - OMIM - HGNC]
Variant type:
single nucleotide variant
Cytogenetic location:
19p13.2
Genomic location:
Preferred name:
NM_000527.5(LDLR):c.1586+5G>A
HGVS:
  • NC_000019.10:g.11113767G>A
  • NG_009060.1:g.29387G>A
  • NM_000527.5:c.1586+5G>AMANE SELECT
  • NM_001195798.2:c.1586+5G>A
  • NM_001195799.2:c.1463+5G>A
  • NM_001195800.2:c.1082+5G>A
  • NM_001195803.2:c.1205+5G>A
  • LRG_274t1:c.1586+5G>A
  • LRG_274:g.29387G>A
  • NC_000019.9:g.11224443G>A
  • NM_000527.4:c.1586+5G>A
  • c.1586+5G>A
Links:
LDLR-LOVD, British Heart Foundation: LDLR_001463; dbSNP: rs781362878
NCBI 1000 Genomes Browser:
rs781362878
Molecular consequence:
  • NM_000527.5:c.1586+5G>A - intron variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001627]
  • NM_001195798.2:c.1586+5G>A - intron variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001627]
  • NM_001195799.2:c.1463+5G>A - intron variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001627]
  • NM_001195800.2:c.1082+5G>A - intron variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001627]
  • NM_001195803.2:c.1205+5G>A - intron variant - [Sequence Ontology: SO:0001627]

Condition(s)

Synonyms:
none provided
Identifiers:
MedGen: C3661900

Recent activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...

Assertion and evidence details

Submission AccessionSubmitterReview Status
(Assertion method)
Clinical Significance
(Last evaluated)
OriginMethodCitations
SCV000697204Women's Health and Genetics/Laboratory Corporation of America, LabCorp
criteria provided, single submitter

(LabCorp Variant Classification Summary - May 2015)
Uncertain significance
(Apr 25, 2017)
germlineclinical testing

PubMed (8)
[See all records that cite these PMIDs]

LabCorp Variant Classification Summary - May 2015.docx,

Citation Link,

SCV000925125Stanford Center for Inherited Cardiovascular Disease, Stanford University
no assertion criteria provided
Pathogenic
(Dec 11, 2017)
germlineprovider interpretation

SCV001789378GeneDx
criteria provided, single submitter

(GeneDx Variant Classification Process June 2021)
Likely pathogenic
(Mar 27, 2023)
germlineclinical testing

Citation Link

Summary from all submissions

EthnicityOriginAffectedIndividualsFamiliesChromosomes testedNumber TestedFamily historyMethod
not providedgermlineyesnot providednot providednot providednot providednot providedclinical testing
not providedgermlineunknownnot providednot providednot providednot providednot providedclinical testing, provider interpretation

Citations

PubMed

Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Greek children and their families: genotype-to-phenotype correlations and a reconsideration of LDLR mutation spectrum.

Mollaki V, Progias P, Drogari E.

Atherosclerosis. 2014 Dec;237(2):798-804. doi: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2014.09.031. Epub 2014 Oct 30.

PubMed [citation]
PMID:
25463123

Genetic causes of monogenic familial hypercholesterolemia in the Greek population: Lessons, mistakes, and the way forward.

Mollaki V, Drogari E.

J Clin Lipidol. 2016 Jul-Aug;10(4):748-756. doi: 10.1016/j.jacl.2016.02.020. Epub 2016 Mar 23. Review.

PubMed [citation]
PMID:
27578104
See all PubMed Citations (8)

Details of each submission

From Women's Health and Genetics/Laboratory Corporation of America, LabCorp, SCV000697204.1

#EthnicityIndividualsChromosomes TestedFamily HistoryMethodCitations
1not providednot providednot providednot providedclinical testing PubMed (8)

Description

Variant summary: The LDLR c.1586+5G>A variant involves the alteration of a conserved intronic nucleotide that is 5 nucleotides away from the exon-intron junction. 4/5 splice prediction tools predict a significant impact on normal splicing and ESE finder predicts that the variant may cause an SRp55 ESE site to be introduced at the locus. One functional study has shown that the variant causes two aberrant splicing transcripts in several heterozygous patient cell lines and that the variant segregates with disease within two families, although several family members are discordant. This study also showed that LDL receptor was not properly trafficked to the cell surface in transfected COS7 cells (Jensen_CG_1999). However, a second functional study also detected aberrant splicing, but assessed LDL receptor protein function in heterozygous patient-derived lymphoblast cell lines and found that ~75% or greater of LDLR was at the cell surface and LDL was internalized similarly to controls, suggesting the variant transcripts do not have a significant biological impact (Holla_MGM_2009). Additionally, several studies have cited the variant in hypercholesterolemia patients, though cosegregation data is lacking in most cases. Based on the literature data, the variant may represent a mild mutation and may have a potentiated effect in compound heterozygosity with a truly pathogenic mutation, but have a less severe impact in heterozygous patients. This variant was found in the large control database ExAC at a frequency of 0.000034 (4/117662 control chromosomes), which does not exceed the estimated maximal expected allele frequency of a pathogenic LDLR variant (0.0010005). Multiple clinical diagnostic laboratories/reputable databases have classified this variant with conflicting interpretations, including likely pathogenic and uncertain significance. Taken together, this variant is classified as VUS until more conclusive family segregation data and/or control data can be assessed.

#SampleMethodObservation
OriginAffectedNumber testedTissuePurposeMethodIndividualsAllele frequencyFamiliesCo-occurrences
1germlineunknownnot providednot providednot providednot providednot providednot providednot provided

From Stanford Center for Inherited Cardiovascular Disease, Stanford University, SCV000925125.1

#EthnicityIndividualsChromosomes TestedFamily HistoryMethodCitations
1not providednot providednot providednot providedprovider interpretationnot provided

Description

c.1586+5G>A in intron 10 of the LDLR gene (NM_00527; chr19-11224443-G-A) SCICD Classification: pathogenic variant based on strong case data, strong segregation data and strong functional data. We do feel it is suitable for assessing risk in healthy relatives ("predictive genetic testing"). Gene-level evidence: LDLR: LDL receptors are located on the surface of the liver and play an important role in LDL recycling. Pathogenic variants in LDLR account for 80% of cases of familial hypercholesterolemia. Both missense and truncating/frameshift variants can be pathogenic. Case data (not including our patient): at least 25 cases, plus other family members. · ClinVar: § LDLR-LOVD, British Heart Foundation - likely pathogenic - 2 out of 2600 patients with FH have this variant § Centre de Génétique Moléculaire et Chromosomique, Unité de génétique de l'Obésité et des Dyslipidémies,APHP, GH Hôpitaux Universitaires Pitié-Salpêtrière / Charles-Foix - VUS § U4M - Lille University & CHRU Lille,Université Lille 2 - CHRU de Lille - likely pathogenic § Fundacion Hipercolesterolemia Familiar - VUS § Never seen at Invitae § Color Genomics has this variant in their "John Doe" report: they indicate that many algorithms predict a significant impact on the intron 10 donor · Laboratorium voor Moleculaire Diagnostiek Experimentele Vasculaire Geneeskunde,Academisch Medisch Centrum - pathogenic · Cases in the literature: · Yang et al 2007: 87 Taiwanese individuals with FH from 30 unrelated families: seen in 2 families. Authors report that this variant may result in the skipping of exon 10. This variant segregated with disease in family members; however, the number of family members with which it segregates is unknown. · Ekström et al 1994: this variant (noted as c.1596+5G>A in this paper) was detected in 1 out of 7 children with FH. · Fouchier et al 2005: 1 out of 325 patients in the Dutch cohort · Taylor et al 2007: Found this variant in one out of 400 patients with FH. This particular patient had possible FH. · Guardamagna et al 2009: This variant was seen in one patient of the following cohort: 264 children from 201 families, 148 affected parents and 100 unaffected siblings. · Mollaki et al 2014: Variant detected in 1 out of 561 patients from 262 families · Jensen et al 1999: This variant is known as c.1596+5G>A in this paper. This variant was present in a 36yo Danish man presenting with tendon xanthomas, severe CAD, CABG at 24yo and very high LDL cholesterol. This man had another variant as well - p.T383P. This variant segregated with disease in his family members (pedigree A, FH-DK 8). Another family had only this variant and it segregated with disease. From the first family, this variant segregated with 8 affected individuals. From the second family, this variant segregated in 4 individuals. Segregation data: See above, Jensen et al 1999 Functional data: Jenner et 1999: sequence analysis of cDNA indicates that either i) a cryptic splice site is activated or ii) exon 10 is skipped: i) the donor splice site at the +5 position is activated to create a cryptic splice site which results in an in-frame insertion of 22 amino acids; ii) in-frame deletion of 75 amino acids in the EGF precursor homology domain of the LDL receptor protein. The authors predicted about 50% of these variants were spliced correctly, and 50% spliced incorrectly. To measure the amount of LDL receptor protein on the surface of the cells, fluorescence was used. Fluorescence of both of these mutant cell lines was markedly reduced in both of these cell lines compared to wildtype. Splice data (splice variants only): Buratti et al 2007: "...point mutations leading to cryptic 5' splice site activation were most common in the first intron nucleotide, followed by the fifth nucleotide. Substititons at position +5 were exclusively G>A transitions... The frequency of point mutations at position +5 was significantly higher than observed in[HGMD] suggesting that alterations of this position are particularly prone to aberrant splicing, possibly due to a requirement for sequential interactions with U1 and U6 snRNAs." Functional data above by Jensen and colleagues corroborates predictions that this variant impacts splicing. Conservation data: The G at position c.1586+5 is conserved among species. Population data: Highest MAF in South Asian population: 0.0195%. The variant was reported online in 8 of 122,672 individuals in the Genome Aggregation Consortium Dataset (gnomAD; http://gnomad.broadinstitute.org/), which currently includes variant calls on >140,000 unrelated individuals of African, Asian, European, Ashkenazi, Latino descent. Specifically, the variant was observed in 6 of 15,376 individuals of South Asian descent (MAF=0.0195%) and 2 of 55,674 individuals of European descent. The phenotype of those individuals is not publicly available. The dataset is comprised of multiple cohorts, some of which were recruited from the general population, others were enriched for common cardiovascular disease.

#SampleMethodObservation
OriginAffectedNumber testedTissuePurposeMethodIndividualsAllele frequencyFamiliesCo-occurrences
1germlineunknownnot providednot providednot providednot providednot providednot providednot provided

From GeneDx, SCV001789378.2

#EthnicityIndividualsChromosomes TestedFamily HistoryMethodCitations
1not providednot providednot providednot providedclinical testingnot provided

Description

Not observed at significant frequency in large population cohorts (gnomAD); While mRNA studies confirm the presence of one or more alternatively-spliced transcripts, functional studies at the protein level do not agree on the effect of this variant on receptor function (Jensen et al., 1999; Holla et al., 2009); Also known as c.1592+5 G>A; This variant is associated with the following publications: (PMID: 27578104, 27821657, 25463123, 19208450, 16250003, 17539906, 19446849, 31447099, 32793292, 17964958, 30710474, 7635461, 32977124, 32660911, 33740630, 34037665, 33418990, 34456049, 35913489, 31947532, 10668928)

#SampleMethodObservation
OriginAffectedNumber testedTissuePurposeMethodIndividualsAllele frequencyFamiliesCo-occurrences
1germlineyesnot providednot providednot providednot providednot providednot providednot provided

Last Updated: May 7, 2024