Description
The HFE c.193A>T (p.Ser65Cys) variant was identified in the literature in multiple studies investigating the relationship between HFE variants and hemochromatosis or iron overload. A study of 711 patients with hemochromatosis found that the S65C variant was enriched in individuals with hemochromatosis in the absence of the two classical hemochromatosis variants (C282Y and H63D), with an affected frequency of 0.078 and a control frequency of 0.025. This study suggested that the S65C variant is associated with a mild form of hemochromatosis (Mura_1999_PMID:10194428). The p.S65C variant was also found in 14/296 patients with iron overload (freq=0.024) and 8/250 healthy controls (freq=0.016), suggesting that the variant may contribute to mild iron overload (Holmstrom_2002_PMID: 12377814). However, more recent studies have disputed the role of the S65C variant in hemochromatosis and iron status. A study of HFE polymorphisms in a Spanish Mediterranean population and another study of 6,020 Danish men both found no effect of the S65C variant on iron status (Aranda_2010_PMID: 20107990; Pedersen_2009_PMID:19159930). This variant was also identified in dbSNP (ID: rs1800730), ClinVar (classified as a VUS by Invitae and Illumina and as pathogenic by Blueprint Genetics for hereditary hemochromatosis) and LOVD 3.0, but was not reported in Cosmic. The variant was identified in control databases in 2891 of 282878 chromosomes (24 homozygous) at a frequency of 0.01022 increasing the likelihood this could be a low frequency benign variant (Genome Aggregation Database Feb 27, 2017). The variant was observed in the following populations: European (Finnish) in 537 of 25120 chromosomes (freq: 0.02138), European (non-Finnish) in 1977 of 129196 chromosomes (freq: 0.0153), Other in 72 of 7226 chromosomes (freq: 0.009964), Latino in 173 of 35440 chromosomes (freq: 0.004881), Ashkenazi Jewish in 35 of 10370 chromosomes (freq: 0.003375), African in 63 of 24958 chromosomes (freq: 0.002524), South Asian in 30 of 30616 chromosomes (freq: 0.00098), and East Asian in 4 of 19952 chromosomes (freq: 0.000201). The p.Ser65 residue is conserved in mammals but not in more distantly related organisms, and four out of five computational analyses (PolyPhen-2, SIFT, BLOSUM, MutationTaster) suggest that the variant may impact the protein; however, this information is not predictive enough to assume pathogenicity. The variant occurs outside of the splicing consensus sequence and in silico or computational prediction software programs (SpliceSiteFinder, MaxEntScan, NNSPLICE, GeneSplicer) do not predict a difference in splicing. In summary, based on the above information the clinical significance of this variant cannot be determined with certainty at this time. This variant is classified as a variant of uncertain significance, however we would suggest that this variant may be a risk factor for hemochromatosis.
# | Sample | Method | Observation |
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Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences |
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1 | unknown | yes | not provided | not provided | not provided | | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |