4.8 Article

Large-scale targeted sequencing identifies risk genes for neurodevelopmental disorders

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18723-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01MH101221]
  2. Simons Foundation (SFARI) [608045]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [81525007, 81730036]
  4. Science and Technology Projects of Hunan Province [2018SK1030]
  5. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1091593, 1155224]
  6. Channel 7 Children's Research Foundation
  7. Czech Ministry of Health [17-29423A]
  8. Research Fund of the University of Antwerp (Methusalem-OEC grant-GENOMED)
  9. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [91610024]
  10. Italian Ministry of Health [2751604]
  11. NHRMC
  12. Vincent Chiodo Foundation
  13. NIH [T32 HG000035-23, R01MH109912]
  14. FWO

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Most genes associated with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) were identified with an excess of de novo mutations (DNMs) but the significance in case-control mutation burden analysis is unestablished. Here, we sequence 63 genes in 16,294 NDD cases and an additional 62 genes in 6,211 NDD cases. By combining these with published data, we assess a total of 125 genes in over 16,000 NDD cases and compare the mutation burden to nonpsychiatric controls from ExAC. We identify 48 genes (25 newly reported) showing significant burden of ultra-rare (MAF<0.01%) gene-disruptive mutations (FDR 5%), six of which reach family-wise error rate (FWER) significance (p<1.25E-06). Among these 125 targeted genes, we also reevaluate DNM excess in 17,426 NDD trios with 6,499 new autism trios. We identify 90 genes enriched for DNMs (FDR 5%; e.g., GABRG2 and UIMC1); of which, 61 reach FWER significance (p<3.64E-07; e.g., CASZ1). In addition to doubling the number of patients for many NDD risk genes, we present phenotype-genotype correlations for seven risk genes (CTCF, HNRNPU, KCNQ3, ZBTB18, TCF12, SPEN, and LEO1) based on this large-scale targeted sequencing effort. For many neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) risk genes, the significance for mutational burden is unestablished. Here, the authors sequence 125 candidate NDD genes in over 16,000 NDD cases; case-control mutational burden analysis identifies 48 genes with a significant burden of severe ultra-rare mutations.

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