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Article Abstract

Motivation: Protein-coding genetic alterations are frequently observed in Clinical Genetics, but the high yield of variants of uncertain significance remains a limitation in decision making. RAS-family GTPases are cancer drivers, but only 54 variants, across all family members, fall within well-known hotspots. However, extensive sequencing has identified 881 non-hotspot variants for which significance remains to be investigated.

Results: Here, we evaluate 935 missense variants from seven RAS genes, observed in cancer, RASopathies and the healthy adult population. We characterized hotspot variants, previously studied experimentally, using 63 sequence- and 3D structure-based scores, chosen by their breadth of biophysical properties. Applying scores that display best correlation with experimental measures, we report new valuable mechanistic inferences for both hot-spot and non-hotspot variants. Moreover, we demonstrate that 3D scores have little-to-no correlation with those based on DNA sequence, which are commonly used in Clinical Genetics. Thus, combined, these new knowledge bear significant relevance.

Availability And Implementation: All genomic and 3D scores, and markdown for generating figures, are provided in our supplemental data.

Supplementary Information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8208742PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btaa972DOI Listing

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