| Literature DB >> 25050139 |
Elena Bacchelli1, Fabiola Ceroni1, Dalila Pinto2, Silvia Lomartire1, Maila Giannandrea3, Patrizia D'Adamo4, Elena Bonora5, Piero Parchi6, Raffaella Tancredi7, Agatino Battaglia7, Elena Maestrini1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a highly heritable, neurodevelopmental condition showing extreme genetic heterogeneity. While it is well established that rare genetic variation, both de novo and inherited, plays an important role in ASD risk, recent studies also support a rare recessive contribution.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha T-catenin; Autism spectrum disorder (ASD); CTNNA3; Cell adhesion; DNA copy number variants; αT-catenin
Year: 2014 PMID: 25050139 PMCID: PMC4104741 DOI: 10.1186/1866-1955-6-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurodev Disord ISSN: 1866-1947 Impact factor: 4.025
Figure 1Detection and breakpoint definition of deletions in the discovery pedigree. (A, C) Sequence electropherograms with breakpoint-spanning sequences in the mother and in the father, respectively (NCBI build 36 coordinates). In (A) the two base pairs (AT), common to both ends, are highlighted in blue. (B) GenomeStudio plots of the log R ratio and B allele frequency data from the 1 M-Duo SNP array for family 3456. The deletions result in a decrease in the log R ratio and a lack of heterozygous variants (the expected allelic ratio for heterozygous variants is 0.5). The deleted SNPs are depicted in red, and the red rectangle indicates the region deleted on both alleles in the proband.
Figure 2Further characterisation of deletions in the pedigree 3456. (A) From the left, results of PCR across father's and mother's deletion breakpoints, respectively: only the allele with the deletion can be amplified and visualized as a band of 301 bp in the father, in the proband and the unaffected sister, and as a band of 949 bp in the mother and in the proband. On the right, the amplification with primers mapping in the deleted exon of CTNNA3 indicates the presence of at least one allele without the deletion. At both extremities of the gel, 1-kb Plus and 100-bp DNA ladder were loaded. (B) The segregation pattern for these two deletions involving CTNNA3 in the discovery pedigree. Autism is indicated in black filling. (C) Schematic from the UCSC genome browser. The figure shows the position of the two CTNNA3 deletions in the pedigree 3456. The region shown corresponds to approximately 1.8 Mb on 10q21.3 (NCBI build 37 coordinates).
Frequency of exonic deletions in ASD cases and controls
| ASD cases | 2,147 | 16b | 0.37 | 0.62 | 6b | 0.14 | 0.56 |
| Controls | 6,639 | 43 | 0.32 | 14 | 0.11 |
aFisher's exact test; bIncluding the two exon 11 deletions in family 3456.
Figure 3Pedigree of four ASD families carrying exonic deletions. Black filling indicates ASD diagnosis.
Figure 4Expression analysis of in mouse brain. Western blot analysis of αT-catenin and αN-catenin in mouse hippocampus (A) and cortex (B) at different developmental stages (from P0 to P90). (C, D) Histograms showing the band intensity normalised by GAPDH as internal loading control.