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Domain-specific cognitive impairments in humans and flies with reduced CYFIP1 dosage

Authors :
Jill Kirschen
Tao Wang
Rebecca A. Nebel
Claudia Bagni
Parisa Hemati
Young Jae Woo
Brett S. Abrahams
Alexandros K. Kanellopoulos
Source :
Biol Psychiatry
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Deletions encompassing a four-gene region on chromosome 15 (BP1-BP2 at 15q11.2), seen at a population frequency of 1 in 500, are associated with increased risk for schizophrenia, epilepsy, and other common neurodevelopmental disorders. However, little is known in terms of how these common deletions impact cognition. Methods We used a Web-based tool to characterize cognitive function in a novel cohort of adult carriers and their noncarrier family members. Results from 31 carrier and 38 noncarrier parents from 40 families were compared with control data from 6530 individuals who self-registered on the Lumosity platform and opted in to participate in research. We then examined aspects of sensory and cognitive function in flies harboring a mutation in Cyfip, the homologue of one of the genes within the deletion. For the fly studies, 10 or more groups of 50 individuals per genotype were included. Results Our human studies revealed profound deficits in grammatical reasoning, arithmetic reasoning, and working memory in BP1-BP2 deletion carriers. No such deficits were observed in noncarrier spouses. Our fly studies revealed deficits in associative and nonassociative learning despite intact sensory perception. Conclusions Our results provide new insights into outcomes associated with BP1-BP2 deletions and call for a discussion on how to appropriately communicate these findings to unaffected carriers. Findings also highlight the utility of an online tool in characterizing cognitive function in a geographically distributed population.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biol Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5ca6d96d6432e46cca7e7f83adebb96