| Literature DB >> 15647115 |
Jacob L McCauley1, Chun Li, Lan Jiang, Lana M Olson, Genea Crockett, Kimberly Gainer, Susan E Folstein, Jonathan L Haines, James S Sutcliffe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autism is a neurobehavioral spectrum of phenotypes characterized by deficits in the development of language and social relationships and patterns of repetitive, rigid and compulsive behaviors. Twin and family studies point to a significant genetic etiology, and several groups have performed genomic linkage screens to identify susceptibility loci.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15647115 PMCID: PMC546213 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-6-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Sample Demographics
| Tufts/NEMC | 71 |
| AGRE | 85 |
| Vanderbilt | 2 |
| Males | 257 |
| Females | 76 |
| | |
| Males | 117 |
| Females | 31 |
| | |
| Males | 137 |
| Females | 44 |
| | |
| Males | 3 |
| Females | 1 |
| Tufts/NEMC* | 2–46.7 |
| AGRE | 2–38.0 |
| Vanderbilt | 6.2–9.2 |
| | |
| Tufts/NEMC (130) | 87.8% |
| AGRE (108) | 59.7% |
| Vanderbilt (4) | 100.0% |
| | |
| AGRE (14) | 7.7% |
| | |
| Tufts/NEMC (6) | 4.1% |
| AGRE (2) | 1.1% |
| | |
| Tufts/NEMC (2) | 1.4% |
| AGRE (6) | 3.3% |
| | |
| AGRE (14) | 7.7% |
| | |
| Tufts/NEMC (2) | 1.4% |
| | 13.5% |
| Tufts/NEMC (8) | 5.4% |
| AGRE (37) | 20.4% |
| | |
| <30 | 13 |
| 30–49 | 21 |
| 50–69 | 37 |
| 70+ | 17 |
| Unknown | 60 |
| | |
| <30 | 17 |
| 30–49 | 27 |
| 50–69 | 15 |
| 70+ | 13 |
| Unknown | 109 |
| | |
| <30 | 1 |
| 30–49 | 1 |
| 50–69 | 0 |
| 70+ | 2 |
| Unknown | 0 |
*ADI-Rs performed <4 yrs were repeated at 4 yrs for Tufts/NEMC families
**IQ estimates are based on the Vineland Daily Living standard scores
***IQ estimates are based on overall Vineland Adaptive Behavior standard scores
Linkage Data for Loci with LOD Scores >1.5
| 3p25.3 | 25 | D3S3691 | 1.76R | |
| 6q23.2 | 131 | D6S1656 | 0.62 | |
| 7q35 | 152 | D7S2195 | 1.14 | |
| 12p12.1 | 45 | D12S1591 | 1.43 | |
| 16p13.2 | 15 | ATA41E04 | 1.38 | |
| 16p13.12 | 33 | D16S3062 | 1.60 | |
| 16p12.3 | 43 | D16S490 | 1.49 | |
| 17q11.2 | 53 | D17S1294 | 2.13 | |
| 17q21.2 | 69 | D17S1299 | 1.60 | |
| 19p13.11 | 40 | D19S930 | 1.92 | |
| 19p13.11 | 56 | D19S113 | 1.39 |
R: recessive; D: dominant
Figure 1Genome-wide nonparametric linkage analysis in 158 multiplex families for autism loci. Individual plots show allele-sharing LOD* scores calculated for autosomes using Allegro and MLOD scores for the X chromosome calculated using ASPEX.
Figure 2Multipoint linkage analysis under all models for chromosomes 17 (A) and 19 (B). Multipoint parametric HLOD plots for both dominant (blue) and recessive (red) models, and nonparametric allele-sharing LOD* values (black) are displayed across the respective chromosomes. OSA analysis using ascending "developmental milestones" factor scores to order families is shown for chromosome 19, for which a 92-family optimal subset was identified and used to calculate allele-sharing LOD* scores (dashed black line).
Figure 3OSA using family-specific LOD scores as the ranking covariate. Families were ordered based on descending LOD scores at peak linkage for 19p13 and allele-sharing LOD scores calculated in the optimal subset for (A) chromosome 17 or (B) chromosome 6. Families were also ranked based on descending LOD scores at peak linkage on chromosome 7q (C), and LOD scores calculated for chromosome 5. Solid lines reflect multipoint LOD scores corresponding to the entire dataset for the chromosome being analyzed, while dashed lines represent analysis of the optimal subset (above the dataset division in all cases) identified from OSA; these were 52 families for chromosome 17, 30 for chromosome 6 and 41 families for chromosome 7.