| Literature DB >> 24410847 |
Holly N Cukier, Nicole D Dueker, Susan H Slifer, Joycelyn M Lee, Patrice L Whitehead, Eminisha Lalanne, Natalia Leyva, Ioanna Konidari, Ryan C Gentry, William F Hulme, Derek Van Booven, Vera Mayo, Natalia K Hofmann, Michael A Schmidt, Eden R Martin, Jonathan L Haines, Michael L Cuccaro, John R Gilbert, Margaret A Pericak-Vance1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) comprise a range of neurodevelopmental conditions of varying severity, characterized by marked qualitative difficulties in social relatedness, communication, and behavior. Despite overwhelming evidence of high heritability, results from genetic studies to date show that ASD etiology is extremely heterogeneous and only a fraction of autism genes have been discovered.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24410847 PMCID: PMC3896704 DOI: 10.1186/2040-2392-5-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Figure 1Flowchart of sequencing and filtering methods to identify and prioritize IBD variants. The data from whole exome sequencing as well as two genotyping platforms, whole genome SNP array and exome chip array, were each independently generated and processed. SNP array genotyping calls were compared to variants identified by exome sequencing as a quality check. Independent confirmation of calls from exome sequencing were made either by genotyping on the HumanExome BeadChip or by traditional Sanger sequencing. IBD, identical by descent.
Average sequencing coverage and depth
| 38 Mb | 63.34% | 97.58% | 81.68% | 62.89% | 64.41x |
| 50 Mb | 74.43% | 95.24% | 82.32% | 65.37% | 55.78x |
Figure 2Diagram of genes of high interest. The area of each circle corresponds to the number of genes identified in one of four categories: genes previously implicated as ASD candidates, non-ASD genes that have been implicated in other neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders, genes found to have damaging variants in more than one family, and genes that carry two damaging alterations in the same family. ASD, autism spectrum disorder.
Damaging, validated variants in genes previously implicated in ASD or other disorders in multiple families
| 37425 | chr12:88472996 | rs61941020 | C > T | Arg1746Gln | 3/610 | ASD, ID | Coppieters | |
| | 37117 | chr12:88508258 | rs79705698 | T > C | Asp664Gly | 15/612 | ASD, ID | Coppieters |
| 37117 | chr8:2965294 | - | G > C | Pro2262Ala | 2/614 | ASD, SZ | Havik | |
| | 17122 | chr8:3253832 | - | C > T | Gly827Asp | 0/604 | ASD, SZ | Havik |
| 37037 | chr4:187518041 | rs72716244 | T > C | Asp4218Gly | 11/610 | ASD, BD | Blair | |
| | 17545 | chr4:187549364 | rs111886222 | G > A | Thr1585Met | 5/614 | ASD, BD | Blair |
| | 17545 | chr4:187557908 | rs113970444 | C > T | Arg1268Gln | 5/608 | ASD, BD | Blair |
| 17342, 18074 | chr5:168180047 | rs34260167 | C > T | Ser629Asn | 7/616 | MD | Glessner | |
| 37994 | chr6:147635108 | rs144099092 | A > G | Leu412Val | 2/614 | ASD | Davis | |
| 7623 | chr6:147636753 | rs148830578 | T > A | Try502Cys | 2/614 | ASD | Davis |
ASD, autism spectrum disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; HIHG, Hussman Institute for Human Genomics; ID, intellectual disability; MD, major depression; SZ, schizophrenia.
Families with multiple damaging, validated variants in the same, previously implicated gene
| 17351 | chr3:52011912 | rs17849626 | G > A | Arg32Gln | 25/614 | ASD | Casey | |
| | | chr3:52014897 | rs61729088 | C > G | Arg227Gly | 2/616 | ASD | Casey |
| 17545 | chr4:187549364 | rs111886222 | G > A | Thr1584Met | 5/614 | ASD, BD | Blair | |
| | | chr4:187557908 | rs113970444 | C > T | Arg1268Gln | 5/608 | ASD, BD | Blair |
| 7606 | chr6:9809860 | - | C > T | Arg538Gln | 0/602 | TS | Sundaram | |
| | | chr6:9900660 | rs148761621 | C > A | Glu204Stop | 0/614 | TS | Sundaram |
| 37232 | chr12:42862463 | rs61924369 | C > T | Glu185Lys | 0/614 | E | Bassuk | |
| chr12:42864125 | - | C > G | Val57Leu | 0/614 | E | Bassuk |
ASD, autism spectrum disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; E, epilepsy; HIHG, Hussman Institute for Human Genomics; TS, Tourette syndrome.