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How rare and common risk variation jointly affect liability for autism spectrum disorder

Authors :
Lambertus Klei
Lora Lee McClain
Behrang Mahjani
Klea Panayidou
Silvia De Rubeis
Anna-Carin Säll Grahnat
Gun Karlsson
Yangyi Lu
Nadine Melhem
Xinyi Xu
Abraham Reichenberg
Sven Sandin
Christina M. Hultman
Joseph D. Buxbaum
Kathryn Roeder
Bernie Devlin
Source :
Molecular Autism, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMC, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Background Genetic studies have implicated rare and common variations in liability for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Of the discovered risk variants, those rare in the population invariably have large impact on liability, while common variants have small effects. Yet, collectively, common risk variants account for the majority of population-level variability. How these rare and common risk variants jointly affect liability for individuals requires further study. Methods To explore how common and rare variants jointly affect liability, we assessed two cohorts of ASD families characterized for rare and common genetic variations (Simons Simplex Collection and Population-Based Autism Genetics and Environment Study). We analyzed data from 3011 affected subjects, as well as two cohorts of unaffected individuals characterized for common genetic variation: 3011 subjects matched for ancestry to ASD subjects and 11,950 subjects for estimating allele frequencies. We used genetic scores, which assessed the relative burden of common genetic variation affecting risk of ASD (henceforth “burden”), and determined how this burden was distributed among three subpopulations: ASD subjects who carry a potentially damaging variant implicated in risk of ASD (“PDV carriers”); ASD subjects who do not (“non-carriers”); and unaffected subjects who are assumed to be non-carriers. Results Burden harbored by ASD subjects is stochastically greater than that harbored by control subjects. For PDV carriers, their average burden is intermediate between non-carrier ASD and control subjects. Both carrier and non-carrier ASD subjects have greater burden, on average, than control subjects. The effects of common and rare variants likely combine additively to determine individual-level liability. Limitations Only 305 ASD subjects were known PDV carriers. This relatively small subpopulation limits this study to characterizing general patterns of burden, as opposed to effects of specific PDVs or genes. Also, a small fraction of subjects that are categorized as non-carriers could be PDV carriers. Conclusions Liability arising from common and rare risk variations likely combines additively to determine risk of any individual diagnosed with ASD. On average, ASD subjects carry a substantial burden of common risk variation, even if they also carry a rare PDV affecting risk.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20402392 and 16674790
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Autism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4e6961eb1667479092ad9ac27de2cdb3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13229-021-00466-2