Tumor Patterns and Cancer Risk in Carriers of TP53 exonic Germline Variants that alter mRNA Splicing
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Pathogenic germline variants in the TP53 gene cause Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS), a highly penetrant cancer predisposition disorder. Most of these variants arise from single-nucleotide variations (SNVs) in TP53 exons, causing missense mutations. However, some of these SNVs may also alter mRNA splicing, defining spliceogenic single nucleotide variants (SE-SNVs) of uncertain clinical significance. We reassessed previously classified TP53 missense variants for spliceogenic effects using SpliceAI predictions, in vitro minigene assays, and transcriptomic data from TCGA. Genotype-phenotype correlations were evaluated using clinical data from carriers of TP53 germline variants across multiple databases and registries. Among 58 identified SE-SNVs, 40 were missense and 18 synonymous. Experimental validation showed that most induce aberrant splicing events, frequently via cryptic splice site activation, leading to frameshift and premature stop codons. Several missense variants previously classified as having mild or low pathogenicity were found instead to have strong spliceogenic effects and were associated with early-onset cancers typical of LFS, suggesting that splicing alterations may override their protein-coding impact. The frequent SNV c.375G>A leading to the synonymous variant p.T125= shows intermediate severity, likely due to partial retention of normal splicing activity. Our study highlights the underestimated pathogenic potential of SE-SNVs affecting the TP53 gene. These findings underscore the importance of integrating splicing predictions, functional assays, and transcript-level analyses into TP53 variant interpretation to improve risk stratification in LFS.