| Literature DB >> 25567849 |
Bernard Crespi1, Kyle Summers2, Steve Dorus3.
Abstract
Genomic sister-disorders are defined here as diseases mediated by duplications versus deletions of the same region. Such disorders can provide unique information concerning the genomic underpinnings of human neurodevelopment because effects of diametric variation in gene copy number on cognitive and behavioral phenotypes can be inferred. We describe evidence from the literature on deletions versus duplications for the regions underlying the best-known human neurogenetic sister-disorders, including Williams syndrome, Velocardiofacial syndrome, and Smith-Magenis syndrome, as well as the X-chromosomal conditions Klinefelter and Turner syndromes. These data suggest that diametric copy-number alterations can, like diametric alterations to imprinted genes, generate contrasting phenotypes associated with autistic-spectrum and psychotic-spectrum conditions. Genomically based perturbations to the development of the human social brain are thus apparently mediated to a notable degree by effects of variation in gene copy number. We also conducted the first analyses of positive selection for genes in the regions affected by these disorders. We found evidence consistent with adaptive evolution of protein-coding genes, or selective sweeps, for three of the four sets of sister-syndromes analyzed. These studies of selection facilitate identification of candidate genes for the phenotypes observed and lend a novel evolutionary dimension to the analysis of human cognitive architecture and neurogenetic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: autism; evolution; gene copy-number variation; positive Darwinian selection; schizophrenia
Year: 2009 PMID: 25567849 PMCID: PMC3352408 DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2008.00056.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Genomic sister-disorders of human growth, development, cognition and behavior, with descriptions of their genetic bases
| Syndrome name or description | Primary genomic alteration and genes implicated |
|---|---|
| Smith–Magenis | Hemizygous deletion of region at 17p11.2 including |
| Potocki–Lupski | Duplication of Smith–Magenis region ( |
| VCFS region deletion | Deletion of ∼30 genes at 22q11.2, effects from |
| VCFS region duplication | Duplication of 22q11.2 region ( |
| Williams-syndrome region deletion | Hemizygous deletion of over 25 genes at 7q11.23; effects from |
| Williams-syndrome region duplication | Duplication of 7q11.23 region ( |
| Klinefelter | One or more excess X chromosomes; Increased expression of PAR1, PAR2 genes and other non X-inactivated genes ( |
| Turner | All or part of X chromosome lost ( |
Genomic sister-disorders categorized into two groups, each of which shares a suite of partially overlapping phenotypic traits
| Psychotic-spectrum syndromes | Autistic-spectrum syndromes |
|---|---|
| Smith–Magenis | Potocki–Lupski |
| High levels of sociability ( | High rates of autism and autistic behavior ( |
| Relative strength in verbal skills ( | |
| Case reports of ‘bipolar episodes’ ( | |
| Case report of mood disorder ( | |
| Velocardiofacial | Velocardiofacial-region duplications |
| Better verbal than visual–spatial skills ( | Hyperactivity, attention deficits, anxiety, depression, seizures, speech problems, impulsivity ( |
| High rates of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorders, bipolar, depression, anxiety, phobia ( | Case report of autism ( |
| Case report of Asperger syndrome ( | |
| Two cases of autism ( | |
| Two cases of autism (Christian et al. 2008) | |
| Williams | Williams-region duplications |
| Better verbal than visual–spatial skills ( | Severe language impairment, visual-spatial skills spared ( |
| Hypersociability, fascination with faces ( | High rates of autism and autistic behavior ( |
| Dyslexia ( | |
| High rates of anxiety and phobias ( | |
| Klinefelter | Turner |
| Dyslexia ( | Hyperlexia ( |
| Poor verbal skills, preserved visual- spatial skills ( | Good verbal skills, impaired visual- spatial skills ( |
| High rates of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, schizotypy, bipolar disorder, anxiety, depression ( | Gaze aversion ( |
| High rates of autism and autistic traits in maternal-X cases ( | |
| Reduced incidence of schizophrenia plus bipolar disorder ( | |
| Idiopathic schizophrenia | Idiopathic autism |
| Low birth weight ( | High or average birth weight ( |
| Slow growth ( | Overgrowth, faster body growth ( |
| Better verbal than visual–spatial skills ( | Macrocephaly ( |
| Dyslexia ( | Hyperlexia ( |
| Overlap in genetic basis with bipolar disorder, major depression, and schizotypy ( | Better visual–spatial than verbal skills in subset of cases ( |
‘Psychotic-spectrum’ syndromes involve an increased incidence of psychotic-spectrum psychiatric conditions (mainly schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety, and phobias), and ‘autistic-spectrum’ syndromes involve autistic traits, autism and Asperger syndrome.
Two case studies have described autism or autism-spectrum disorders (PDD-NOS) in Klinefelter individuals (Jha et al. 2007; Merhar and Manning-Courtney 2007). These cases were characterized by speech delay and introversion, with no evidence of restricted interests or motor stereotypies in the four children described.
Evidence for positive selection on genes associated with human neurogenetic sister-disorders, from maximum likelihood analyses
| Gene | Gene symbol | Lineage | −2ΔLn | Positively selected codons (posterior probability) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pseudoautosomal region 1 | ||||
| | Primate | 5.32 | None | |
| | Primate | 8.04 | Leu 125 (0.982) | |
| | Primate | 6.20 | None | |
| | Primate | 9.82 | None | |
| Velocardiofacial syndrome | ||||
| | Primate | 6.70 | None | |
| | Primate | 4.86 | Ser 119 (0.961) | |
| | Primate | 9.94 | Ala 84 (0.961) Thr 321 (0.991) | |
| | Primate | 8.02 | Pro 324 (0.972) | |
| | Human | 6.58 | His 221 (0.983) | |
| Smith–Magenis syndrome | ||||
| | Primate | 5.68 | None | |
| Williams syndrome | ||||
| | Primate | 3.78 | None | |
We focused on putatively causative genes where these were known from studies of single-gene mutations or atypical deletions (in Williams syndrome and Smith–Magenis syndrome), but where the causative genes were unknown (for Klinefelter, Turner, and Velocardiofacial syndromes) we analyzed all of the genes in the affected regions.
P < 0.05, **P < 0.01.