Back to Search Start Over

A novel approach of homozygous haplotype sharing identifies candidate genes in autism spectrum disorder

Authors :
Casey, Jillian P.
Magalhães, Tiago R.
Conroy, Judith M.
Regan, Regina
Shah, Naisha
Anney, Richard
Shields, Denis C.
Abrahams, Brett S.
Almeida, Joana
Bacchelli, Elena
Bailey, Anthony J.
Baird, Gillian
Battaglia, Agatino
Berney, Tom
Bolshakova, Nadia
Bolton, Patrick F.
Bourgeron, Thomas
Brennan, Sean
Cali, Phil
Correia, Catarina
Corsello, Christina
Coutanche, Marc
Dawson, Geraldine
Jonge, Maretha de
Delorme, Richard
Duketis, Eftichia
Duque, Frederico
Estes, Annette
Farrar, Penny
Fernandez, Bridget A.
Folstein, Susan E.
Foley, Suzanne
Fombonne, Eric
Freitag, Christine M.
Gilbert, John
Gillberg, Christopher
Glessner, Joseph T.
Green, Jonathan
Guter, Stephen J.
Hakonarson, Hakon
Holt, Richard
Hughes, Gillian
Hus, Vanessa
Igliozzi, Roberta
Kim, Cecilia
Klauck, Sabine M.
Kolevzon, Alexander
Lamb, Janine A.
Leboyer, Marion
Le Couteur, Ann
Leventhal, Bennett L.
Lord, Catherine
Lund, Sabata C.
Maestrini, Elena
Mantoulan, Carine
Marshall, Christian R.
McConachie, Helen
McDougle, Christopher J.
McGrath, Jane
McMahon, William M.
Merikangas, Alison
Miller, Judith
Minopoli, Fiorella
Mirza, Ghazala K.
Munson, Jeff
Nelson, Stanley F.
Nygren, Gudrun
Oliveira, Guiomar
Pagnamenta, Alistair T.
Papanikolaou, Katerina
Parr, Jeremy R.
Parrini, Barbara
Pickles, Andrew
Pinto, Dalila
Piven, Joseph
Posey, David J.
Poustka, Annemarie
Poustka, Fritz
Ragoussis, Jiannis
Roge, Bernadette
Rutter, Michael L.
Sequeira, Ana F.
Soorya, Latha
Sousa, Inês
Sykes, Nuala
Stoppioni, Vera
Tancredi, Raffaella
Tauber, Maïté
Thompson, Ann P.
Thomson, Susanne
Tsiantis, John
Engeland, Herman van
Vincent, John B.
Volkmar, Fred
Vorstman, Jacob A. S.
Wallace, Simon
Wang, Kai
Wassink, Thomas H.
White, Kathy
Wing, Kirsty
Wittemeyer, Kerstin
Yaspan, Brian L.
Zwaigenbaum, Lonnie
Betancur, Catalina
Buxbaum, Joseph D.
Cantor, Rita M.
Cook, Edwin H.
Coon, Hilary
Cuccaro, Michael L.
Geschwind, Daniel H.
Haines, Jonathan L.
Hallmayer, Joachim
Monaco, Anthony P.
Nurnberger, John I.
Pericak-Vance, Margaret Ann
Schellenberg, Gerard D.
Scherer, Stephen W.
Sutcliffe, James S.
Szatmari, Peter
Vieland, Veronica J.
Wijsman, Ellen M.
Green, Andrew
Gill, Michael
Gallagher, Louise
Vicente, Astrid M.
Ennis, Sean
Casey, Jillian P.
Magalhães, Tiago R.
Conroy, Judith M.
Regan, Regina
Shah, Naisha
Anney, Richard
Shields, Denis C.
Abrahams, Brett S.
Almeida, Joana
Bacchelli, Elena
Bailey, Anthony J.
Baird, Gillian
Battaglia, Agatino
Berney, Tom
Bolshakova, Nadia
Bolton, Patrick F.
Bourgeron, Thomas
Brennan, Sean
Cali, Phil
Correia, Catarina
Corsello, Christina
Coutanche, Marc
Dawson, Geraldine
Jonge, Maretha de
Delorme, Richard
Duketis, Eftichia
Duque, Frederico
Estes, Annette
Farrar, Penny
Fernandez, Bridget A.
Folstein, Susan E.
Foley, Suzanne
Fombonne, Eric
Freitag, Christine M.
Gilbert, John
Gillberg, Christopher
Glessner, Joseph T.
Green, Jonathan
Guter, Stephen J.
Hakonarson, Hakon
Holt, Richard
Hughes, Gillian
Hus, Vanessa
Igliozzi, Roberta
Kim, Cecilia
Klauck, Sabine M.
Kolevzon, Alexander
Lamb, Janine A.
Leboyer, Marion
Le Couteur, Ann
Leventhal, Bennett L.
Lord, Catherine
Lund, Sabata C.
Maestrini, Elena
Mantoulan, Carine
Marshall, Christian R.
McConachie, Helen
McDougle, Christopher J.
McGrath, Jane
McMahon, William M.
Merikangas, Alison
Miller, Judith
Minopoli, Fiorella
Mirza, Ghazala K.
Munson, Jeff
Nelson, Stanley F.
Nygren, Gudrun
Oliveira, Guiomar
Pagnamenta, Alistair T.
Papanikolaou, Katerina
Parr, Jeremy R.
Parrini, Barbara
Pickles, Andrew
Pinto, Dalila
Piven, Joseph
Posey, David J.
Poustka, Annemarie
Poustka, Fritz
Ragoussis, Jiannis
Roge, Bernadette
Rutter, Michael L.
Sequeira, Ana F.
Soorya, Latha
Sousa, Inês
Sykes, Nuala
Stoppioni, Vera
Tancredi, Raffaella
Tauber, Maïté
Thompson, Ann P.
Thomson, Susanne
Tsiantis, John
Engeland, Herman van
Vincent, John B.
Volkmar, Fred
Vorstman, Jacob A. S.
Wallace, Simon
Wang, Kai
Wassink, Thomas H.
White, Kathy
Wing, Kirsty
Wittemeyer, Kerstin
Yaspan, Brian L.
Zwaigenbaum, Lonnie
Betancur, Catalina
Buxbaum, Joseph D.
Cantor, Rita M.
Cook, Edwin H.
Coon, Hilary
Cuccaro, Michael L.
Geschwind, Daniel H.
Haines, Jonathan L.
Hallmayer, Joachim
Monaco, Anthony P.
Nurnberger, John I.
Pericak-Vance, Margaret Ann
Schellenberg, Gerard D.
Scherer, Stephen W.
Sutcliffe, James S.
Szatmari, Peter
Vieland, Veronica J.
Wijsman, Ellen M.
Green, Andrew
Gill, Michael
Gallagher, Louise
Vicente, Astrid M.
Ennis, Sean
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a highly heritable disorder of complex and heterogeneous aetiology. It is primarily characterized by altered cognitive ability including impaired language and communication skills and fundamental deficits in social reciprocity. Despite some notable successes in neuropsychiatric genetics, overall, the high heritability of ASD (~90%) remains poorly explained by common genetic risk variants. However, recent studies suggest that rare genomic variation, in particular copy number variation, may account for a significant proportion of the genetic basis of ASD. We present a large scale analysis to identify candidate genes which may contain low-frequency recessive variation contributing to ASD while taking into account the potential contribution of population differences to the genetic heterogeneity of ASD. Our strategy, homozygous haplotype (HH) mapping, aims to detect homozygous segments of identical haplotype structure that are shared at a higher frequency amongst ASD patients compared to parental controls. The analysis was performed on 1,402 Autism Genome Project trios genotyped for 1 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We identified 25 known and 1,218 novel ASD candidate genes in the discovery analysis including CADM2, ABHD14A, CHRFAM7A, GRIK2, GRM3, EPHA3, FGF10, KCND2, PDZK1, IMMP2L and FOXP2. Furthermore, 10 of the previously reported ASD genes and 300 of the novel candidates identified in the discovery analysis were replicated in an independent sample of 1,182 trios. Our results demonstrate that regions of HH are significantly enriched for previously reported ASD candidate genes and the observed association is independent of gene size (odds ratio 2.10). Our findings highlight the applicability of HH mapping in complex disorders such as ASD and offer an alternative approach to the analysis of genome-wide association data.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1362767507
Document Type :
Electronic Resource