4.7 Article

Convergence of Genes and Cellular Pathways Dysregulated in Autism Spectrum Disorders

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 94, Issue 5, Pages 677-694

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.03.018

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Autism Speaks (USA)
  2. Health Research Board (Ireland) [AUT/2006/1, AUT/2006/2, PD/2006/48]
  3. Medical Research Council (UK)
  4. Hilibrand Foundation (USA)
  5. Genome Canada
  6. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  7. Brain & Behavior Research Foundation
  8. Ontario Genomics Institute
  9. Autistica [7267] Funding Source: researchfish
  10. National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0510-10268] Funding Source: researchfish

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Rare copy-number variation (CNV) is an important source of risk for autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). We analyzed 2,446 ASD-affected families and confirmed an excess of genic deletions and duplications in affected versus control groups (1.41-fold, p = 1.0 x 10(-5)) and an increase in affected subjects carrying exonic pathogenic CNVs overlapping known loci associated with dominant or X-linked ASD and intellectual disability (odds ratio = 12.62, p = 2.7 x 10(-15), similar to 3% of ASD subjects). Pathogenic CNVs, often showing variable expressivity, included rare de novo and inherited events at 36 loci, implicating ASD-associated genes (CHD2, HDAC4, and GDI1) previously linked to other neurodevelopmental disorders, as well as other genes such as SETD5, MIR137, and HDAC9. Consistent with hypothesized gender-specific modulators, females with ASD were more likely to have highly penetrant CNVs (p = 0.017) and were also overrepresented among subjects with fragile X syndrome protein targets (p = 0.02). Genes affected by de novo CNVs and/or loss-of-function single-nucleotide variants converged on networks related to neuronal signaling and development, synapse function, and chromatin regulation.

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