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Structural variation of chromosomes in autism spectrum disorder

Authors :
Anath C. Lionel
Clare A. Gibbons
Jan M. Friedman
David Chitayat
Leon Sloman
Rebecca Baatjes
Andreas Fiebig
Lars Feuk
Christian R. Marshall
John B. Vincent
Mary Shago
Rob Nicolson
Rosanna Weksberg
Lonnie Zwaigenbaum
Sandra Luscombe
Peter Szatmari
Yvonne J. Vos
Can Ficicioglu
Anne Summers
Stephen W. Scherer
Bhooma Thiruvahindrapduram
Ahmad S. Teebi
Abdul Noor
Ann Thompson
Yan Ren
Stefan Schreiber
Bridget A. Fernandez
Rainald Moessner
Dalila Pinto
Susan J. Kirkpatrick
Vicki Crosbie
Jennifer Skaug
Cathy Vardy
Cees E.J. Ketelaars
Wendy Roberts
Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics, 82(2), 477-488. CELL PRESS
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Structural variation (copy number variation [CNV] including deletion and duplication, translocation, inversion) of chromosomes has been identified in some individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but the full etiologic role is unknown. We performed genome-wide assessment for structural abnormalities in 427 unrelated ASD cases via single-nucleotide polymorphism microarrays and karyotyping. With microarrays, we discovered 277 unbalanced CNVs in 44% of ASD families not present in 500 controls (and re-examined in another 1152 controls). Karyotyping detected additional balanced changes. Although most variants were inherited, we found a total of 27 cases with de novo alterations, and in three (11%) of these individuals, two or more new variants were observed. De novo CNVs were found in approximately 7% and approximately 2% of idiopathic families having one child, or two or more ASD siblings, respectively. We also detected 13 loci with recurrent/overlapping CNV in unrelated cases, and at these sites, deletions and duplications affecting the same gene(s) in different individuals and sometimes in asymptomatic carriers were also found. Notwithstanding complexities, our results further implicate the SHANK3-NLGN4-NRXN1 postsynaptic density genes and also identify novel loci at DPP6-DPP10-PCDH9 (synapse complex), ANKRD11, DPYD, PTCHD1, 15q24, among others, for a role in ASD susceptibility. Our most compelling result discovered CNV at 16p11.2 (p = 0.002) (with characteristics of a genomic disorder) at approximately 1% frequency. Some of the ASD regions were also common to mental retardation loci. Structural variants were found in sufficiently high frequency influencing ASD to suggest that cytogenetic and microarray analyses be considered in routine clinical workup.

Details

ISSN :
15376605 and 00029297
Volume :
82
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a062228d6c091b148c570dea1c3d5b3