A plugin for the Ensembl Variant Effect Predictor that uses MaxEntScan to predict variant spliceogenicity

J Shamsani, SH Kazakoff, IM Armean… - …, 2019 - academic.oup.com
J Shamsani, SH Kazakoff, IM Armean, W McLaren, MT Parsons, BA Thompson, TA O'Mara
Bioinformatics, 2019academic.oup.com
Assessing the pathogenicity of genetic variants can be a complex and challenging task.
Spliceogenic variants, which alter mRNA splicing, may yield mature transcripts that encode
non-functional protein products, an important predictor of Mendelian disease risk. However,
most variant annotation tools do not adequately assess spliceogenicity outside the native
splice site and thus the disease-causing potential of variants in other intronic and exonic
regions is often overlooked. Here, we present a plugin for the Ensembl Variant Effect …
Summary
Assessing the pathogenicity of genetic variants can be a complex and challenging task. Spliceogenic variants, which alter mRNA splicing, may yield mature transcripts that encode non-functional protein products, an important predictor of Mendelian disease risk. However, most variant annotation tools do not adequately assess spliceogenicity outside the native splice site and thus the disease-causing potential of variants in other intronic and exonic regions is often overlooked. Here, we present a plugin for the Ensembl Variant Effect Predictor that packages MaxEntScan and extends its functionality to provide splice site predictions using a maximum entropy model. The plugin incorporates a sliding window algorithm to predict splice site loss or gain for any variant that overlaps a transcript feature. We also demonstrate the utility of the plugin by comparing our predictions to two mRNA splicing datasets containing several cancer-susceptibility genes.
Availability and implementation
Source code is freely available under the Apache License, Version 2.0: https://github.com/Ensembl/VEP_plugins.
Supplementary information
Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Oxford University Press