I have this variant c.828-4A>T (say at chr9:3434923) and I am trying to understand what that actually mean. In VCF format, does it mean this as shown below ?
Chr start end TYPE REF ALT
9 3434923 3434926 indel AAA -
It is a single nucleotide substitution (A to T). I wonder if it should be written c.828-4A>T.
When the numbering represents the cDNA sequence and the variant is within an intron, +1 is the first nucleotide of the intron and -1 is the last nucleotide of the intron.
So, your mutation could be an A to T at the fourth last nucleotide of the intron that is spliced out at cDNA position 828.
The HGVS explanation for this type is:
intronic nucleotides (coding DNA reference sequence only)
beginning of the intron; the number of the last nucleotide of the preceding exon, a plus sign and the position in the intron, like c.77+1G, c.77+2T, ....
end of the intron; the number of the first nucleotide of the following exon, a minus sign and the position upstream in the intron, like ..., c.78-2A, c.78-1G.
in the middle of the intron, numbering changes from "c.77+.." to "c.78-.."; for introns with an uneven number of nucleotides the central nucleotide is the last described with a "+" (see Discussion)
NOTE: the format c.IVS1+1G and c.IVS1-2G should not be used
@rbagnall Thank you. I have corrected c.828-4A>T