The contribution of de novo coding mutations to autism spectrum disorder
收藏DataCite Commons2023-05-16 更新2025-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://ndar.nih.gov/study.html?id=352
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Whole exome sequencing has proven to be a powerful tool for understanding the genetic architecture of human disease. Here we apply it to more than 2,500 simplex families, each having a child with an autistic spectrum disorder. By comparing affected to unaffected siblings, we show that 13% of de novo missense mutations and 43% of de novo likely gene-disrupting (LGD) mutations contribute to 12% and 9% of diagnoses, respectively. Including copy number variants, coding de novo mutations contribute to about 30% of all simplex and 45% of female diagnoses. Almost all LGD mutations occur opposite wild-type alleles. LGD targets in affected females significantly overlap the targets in males of lower intelligence quotient (IQ), but neither overlaps significantly with targets in males of higher IQ. We estimate that LGD mutation in about 400 genes can contribute to the joint class of affected females and males of lower IQ, with an overlapping and similar number of genes vulnerable to contributory missense mutation. LGD targets in the joint class overlap with published targets for intellectual disability and schizophrenia, and are enriched for chromatin modifiers, FMRP-associated genes and embryonically expressed genes. Most of the significance for the latter comes from affected females.
PLEASE NOTE: Additional data on these subjects, unrelated to this publication exist in other NDAR Studies. These data include realigned BAM files, unfiltered SNV/InDel variant calls (made by GATK and FreeBayes), and CNVs. Please see this news item for more details: https://ndar.nih.gov/ndarpublicweb/aboutNDAR.html#news_item_201
提供机构:
NIMH Data Archives
创建时间:
2014-10-30



