Abstract

A Novel Deep Intronic Mutation Introducing a Cryptic Exon Causing Neurofibromatosis Type 1 in a Family with Highly Variable Phenotypes: A Case Study

Eva Kathrine Svaasand, Lars Fredrik Engebretsen, Trond Ludvigsen, Wenche Brechan and Wenche Sjursen

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a common dominant inherited disorder with highly variable expressivity. Genetic testing for this condition has been more available the last decade. Here we present a case report of a NF1 family including seven affected family members, some of them with a very severe phenotype. When searching for a causative mutation in the NF1 gene, no mutation was found at DNA level. However, a misspliced transcript including a subsequence of intron 3 appeared when screening RNA. The underlying cause at DNA level was determined to be a deep intronic variant (c.288+1137C>T). This intronic point mutation creates a new splice site causing the insertion of a cryptic exon (r.288_289ins288+1018_1135), leading to reading frameshift at the protein level. Deep intronic mutations introducing a cryptic exon are known to be a cause of NF1, and we reviewed the literature to evaluate how common this mutation is in NF1 syndrome. We found 20 different deep intronic NF1 splice mutations, including the one found in the present study. In conclusion, this case illustrates the value of RNA analysis to detect the cause of genetic diseases, and we decided to use RNA based mutation screening as standard procedure for NF1 genetic testing in our laboratory.