Powell Nicholas R, Geck Renee C, Lai Dongbing, Shugg Tyler, Skaar Todd C, Dunham Maitreya J
Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-5065, USA.
Genetics. 2024 Nov 28;228(4). doi: 10.1093/genetics/iyae170.
The glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) enzyme protects red blood cells against oxidative damage. Individuals with G6PD-impairing polymorphisms are at risk of hemolytic anemia from oxidative stressors. Prevention of G6PD deficiency-related hemolytic anemia is achievable by identifying affected individuals through G6PD genetic testing. However, accurately predicting the clinical consequence of G6PD variants is limited by over 800 G6PD variants which remain of uncertain significance (VUS). There also remains inconsistency in which deficiency-causing variants are included in genetic testing arrays: many institutions only test c.202G > A, though dozens of other variants can cause G6PD deficiency. Here, we improve G6PD genotype interpretations using the All of Us Research Program data and a yeast functional assay. We confirm that G6PD coding variants are the main contributor to decreased G6PD activity and that 13% of individuals in the All of Us data with deficiency-causing variants would be missed by only genotyping for c.202G > A. We expand clinical interpretation for G6PD VUS, reporting that c.595A > G ("Dagua" or "Açores") and the novel variant c.430C > G reduce activity sufficiently to lead to G6PD deficiency. We also provide evidence that 5 missense VUS are unlikely to lead to G6PD deficiency, and we applied the new World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines to recommend classifying 2 synonymous variants as WHO Class C. In total, we provide new or updated clinical interpretations for 9 G6PD variants. We anticipate these results will improve the accuracy, and prompt increased use, of G6PD genetic tests through a more complete clinical interpretation of G6PD variants.
葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶(G6PD)可保护红细胞免受氧化损伤。具有G6PD功能受损多态性的个体有因氧化应激源而患溶血性贫血的风险。通过G6PD基因检测识别受影响个体可预防G6PD缺乏相关的溶血性贫血。然而,准确预测G6PD变体的临床后果受到800多种意义未明的G6PD变体(VUS)的限制。在基因检测阵列中纳入哪些导致缺乏的变体也存在不一致性:许多机构仅检测c.202G>A,尽管还有其他几十种变体可导致G6PD缺乏。在此,我们使用“我们所有人”研究计划的数据和酵母功能测定法改进了G6PD基因型解释。我们证实G6PD编码变体是G6PD活性降低的主要原因,并且仅对c.202G>A进行基因分型会遗漏“我们所有人”数据中13%携带导致缺乏变体的个体。我们扩展了对G6PD VUS的临床解释,报告称c.595A>G(“达瓜”或“亚速尔”)和新变体c.430C>G会充分降低活性,导致G6PD缺乏。我们还提供证据表明5种错义VUS不太可能导致G6PD缺乏,并且我们应用了世界卫生组织(WHO)的新指南建议将2种同义变体分类为WHO C类。我们总共为9种G6PD变体提供了新的或更新的临床解释。我们预计这些结果将通过对G6PD变体更完整的临床解释提高G6PD基因检测的准确性,并促使其使用增加。