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      Predicted Succinated Dehydrogenase Subunit Variant Pathogenicity: Why Are SDHB Variants “Bad”?

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      , MD 1 , , III, PhD 2
      Journal of the Endocrine Society
      Oxford University Press

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          Abstract

          Variants in the 4 genes encoding subunits A-D of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) are associated with paraganglioma and pheochromocytoma. Intuitively, loss-of-function variants affecting any of the subunits should equally diminish SDH function leading to succinate accumulation and tumorigenesis after loss of heterozygosity. However, variants in SDHB are associated with a higher prevalence of metastatic disease and a more aggressive clinical course. Evaluation of the SDH protein structure shows the fraction of amino acids in contact with other subunits or essential prosthetic groups to be: 13% (SDHA), 40% (SDHB), 28% (SDHC), and 28% (SDHD). We therefore hypothesized that SDHB missense variants are more penetrant because a larger fraction alter sensitive interfaces with other SDH subunits or essential molecular features (e.g. the three SDHB iron-sulfur clusters). We also wondered if truncating variants are more common for SDHB than other subunits. To test these hypotheses, we combined three databases (Genome Aggregation Database, ClinVar-NCBI-NIH, and Leiden Open Variant Database) and our institution’s data to create a pool of all known SDH variants. We categorized variants as truncating or missense and evaluated missense variants in the context of the SDH protein structure, scoring each variant in relation to important structures/interfaces and the severity of the amino acid change. This provided an ad hoc impact score for each variant, where a higher score predicts a more deleterious effect. We compared these scores to those obtained using the “Sorting Intolerant from Tolerant” (SIFT) tool that predicts impacts of amino acid changes based on evolutionary sequence conservation. SIFT scores of 0 to 0.05 predict deleterious effects. Both mean impact and SIFT scores could be weighted for the prevalence of each variant in the population. Our database included 2333 total SDH variants: SDHA (838, 36%), SDHB (703, 30%), SDHC (381, 16%), and SDHD (412, 18%). The fractions of truncating variants were 38%, 50%, 51%, and 53% for A-D subunits, respectively. When weighted for prevalence, these fractions were 0.39%, 6.8%, 8.2%, and 0.2%. The number of truncating variants per coding region length and the distribution of locations were similar between subunits. Ad hoc impact scores for A-D subunits were 3.08, 14.9, 9.93, and 11.0, respectively and, when weighted for prevalence, were 0.28, 3.25, 6.32, and 1.15. Mean SIFT scores for subunits A-D were: 0.185, 0.162, 0.238, and 0.410 respectively, and, when weighted for prevalence, were 0.58, 0.70, 0.22, and 0.018. Our results do not support the hypothesis SDHB variants predict a worse clinical outcome because average SDHB variants are, by chance, more biochemically severe. This suggests that SDHB loss may uniquely impact SDH biochemical function.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Endocr Soc
          J Endocr Soc
          jes
          Journal of the Endocrine Society
          Oxford University Press (US )
          2472-1972
          03 May 2021
          03 May 2021
          03 May 2021
          : 5
          : Suppl 1 , ENDO 2021 Abstracts Annual Meeting of the Endocrine Society
          : A71-A72
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Mayo Clinic, Division of Endocrinology , Rochester, MN, USA
          [2 ] Mayo Clinic, Department of Biochemistry , Rochester, MN, USA
          Article
          bvab048.144
          10.1210/jendso/bvab048.144
          8089237
          04fd1771-ef3a-4c23-b935-6d1c9e9f466d
          © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.

          This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com

          History
          Page count
          Pages: 2
          Categories
          Adrenal
          Adrenal - Basic and Translational Aspects
          AcademicSubjects/MED00250

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