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Sporadic autism exomes reveal a highly interconnected protein network of de novo mutations
Authors:O'Roak Brian J  Vives Laura  Girirajan Santhosh  Karakoc Emre  Krumm Niklas  Coe Bradley P  Levy Roie  Ko Arthur  Lee Choli  Smith Joshua D  Turner Emily H  Stanaway Ian B  Vernot Benjamin  Malig Maika  Baker Carl  Reilly Beau  Akey Joshua M  Borenstein Elhanan  Rieder Mark J  Nickerson Deborah A  Bernier Raphael  Shendure Jay  Eichler Evan E
Institution:Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA.
Abstract:It is well established that autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have a strong genetic component; however, for at least 70% of cases, the underlying genetic cause is unknown. Under the hypothesis that de novo mutations underlie a substantial fraction of the risk for developing ASD in families with no previous history of ASD or related phenotypes--so-called sporadic or simplex families--we sequenced all coding regions of the genome (the exome) for parent-child trios exhibiting sporadic ASD, including 189 new trios and 20 that were previously reported. Additionally, we also sequenced the exomes of 50 unaffected siblings corresponding to these new (n = 31) and previously reported trios (n = 19), for a total of 677 individual exomes from 209 families. Here we show that de novo point mutations are overwhelmingly paternal in origin (4:1 bias) and positively correlated with paternal age, consistent with the modest increased risk for children of older fathers to develop ASD. Moreover, 39% (49 of 126) of the most severe or disruptive de novo mutations map to a highly interconnected β-catenin/chromatin remodelling protein network ranked significantly for autism candidate genes. In proband exomes, recurrent protein-altering mutations were observed in two genes: CHD8 and NTNG1. Mutation screening of six candidate genes in 1,703 ASD probands identified additional de novo, protein-altering mutations in GRIN2B, LAMC3 and SCN1A. Combined with copy number variant (CNV) data, these results indicate extreme locus heterogeneity but also provide a target for future discovery, diagnostics and therapeutics.
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