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Common variation contributes to the genetic architecture of social communication traits

Authors :
George Davey Smith
Andrew J. O. Whitehouse
Nicholas J. Timpson
Craig E. Pennell
Jean Golding
Joseph T. Glessner
Kai Wang
Hakon Hakonarson
David M. Evans
Nicole M. Warrington
John P. Kemp
Wei Ang
Susan M. Ring
Wendy L. McArdle
Beate St Pourcain
Source :
Molecular Autism
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

Background Social communication difficulties represent an autistic trait that is highly heritable and persistent during the course of development. However, little is known about the underlying genetic architecture of this phenotype. Methods We performed a genome-wide association study on parent-reported social communication problems using items of the children’s communication checklist (age 10 to 11 years) studying single and/or joint marker effects. Analyses were conducted in a large UK population-based birth cohort (Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and their Children, ALSPAC, N = 5,584) and followed-up within a sample of children with comparable measures from Western Australia (RAINE, N = 1364). Results Two of our seven independent top signals (P- discovery P- replication ≤0.02) within RAINE and suggested evidence for association at 6p22.1 (rs9257616, meta-P = 2.5E-07) and 14q22.1 (rs2352908, meta-P = 1.1E-06). The signal at 6p22.1 was identified within the olfactory receptor gene cluster within the broader major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region. The strongest candidate locus within this genomic area was TRIM27. This gene encodes an ubiquitin E3 ligase, which is an interaction partner of methyl-CpG-binding domain (MBD) proteins, such as MBD3 and MBD4, and rare protein-coding mutations within MBD3 and MBD4 have been linked to autism. The signal at 14q22.1 was found within a gene-poor region. Single-variant findings were complemented by estimations of the narrow-sense heritability in ALSPAC suggesting that approximately a fifth of the phenotypic variance in social communication traits is accounted for by joint additive effects of genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms throughout the genome (h2(SE) = 0.18(0.066), P = 0.0027). Conclusion Overall, our study provides both joint and single-SNP-based evidence for the contribution of common polymorphisms to variation in social communication phenotypes.

Details

ISSN :
20402392
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Autism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d11dfe679b68c88c13682242f9d721fc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/2040-2392-4-34