10-87933224-T-G
Variant summary
Our verdict is Pathogenic. Variant got 18 ACMG points: 18P and 0B. PVS1PM2PP5_Very_Strong
The NM_000314.8(PTEN):c.465T>G(p.Tyr155*) variant causes a stop gained change involving the alteration of a non-conserved nucleotide. The variant was absent in control chromosomes in GnomAD project. In-silico tool predicts a pathogenic outcome for this variant. Variant has been reported in ClinVar as Pathogenic (★★). Variant results in nonsense mediated mRNA decay.
Frequency
Consequence
NM_000314.8 stop_gained
Scores
Clinical Significance
Conservation
Genome browser will be placed here
ACMG classification
Verdict is Pathogenic. Variant got 18 ACMG points.
Transcripts
RefSeq
Gene | Transcript | HGVSc | HGVSp | Effect | Exon rank | MANE | Protein | UniProt |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PTEN | NM_000314.8 | c.465T>G | p.Tyr155* | stop_gained | Exon 5 of 9 | ENST00000371953.8 | NP_000305.3 | |
PTEN | NM_001304717.5 | c.984T>G | p.Tyr328* | stop_gained | Exon 6 of 10 | NP_001291646.4 | ||
PTEN | NM_001304718.2 | c.-286T>G | 5_prime_UTR_variant | Exon 4 of 9 | NP_001291647.1 |
Ensembl
Frequencies
GnomAD3 genomes Cov.: 32
GnomAD4 exome Cov.: 31
GnomAD4 genome Cov.: 32
ClinVar
Submissions by phenotype
PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome Pathogenic:1
For these reasons, this variant has been classified as Pathogenic. This premature translational stop signal has been observed in individual(s) with clinical features of PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PMID: 29095814). This variant is not present in population databases (ExAC no frequency). This sequence change creates a premature translational stop signal (p.Tyr155*) in the PTEN gene. It is expected to result in an absent or disrupted protein product. Loss-of-function variants in PTEN are known to be pathogenic (PMID: 9467011, 21194675). -
Hereditary cancer-predisposing syndrome Pathogenic:1
The p.Y155* pathogenic mutation (also known as c.465T>G), located in coding exon 5 of the PTEN gene, results from a T to G substitution at nucleotide position 465. This changes the amino acid from a tyrosine to a stop codon within coding exon 5. This alteration is expected to result in loss of function by premature protein truncation or nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. As such, this alteration is interpreted as a disease-causing mutation. -
Computational scores
Source:
Splicing
Find out detailed SpliceAI scores and Pangolin per-transcript scores at
Publications
No publications associated with this variant yet.