Autism Linked to Increased Oncogene Mutations but Decreased Cancer Rate
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is one phenotypic aspect of many monogenic, hereditary cancer syndromes. Pleiotropic effects of cancer genes on the autism phenotype could lead to repurposing of oncology medications to treat this increasingly prevalent neurodevelopmental condition for which there is currently no treatment. To explore this hypothesis we sought to discover whether autistic patients more often have rare coding, single-nucleotide variants within tumor suppressor and oncogenes and whether autistic patients are more often diagnosed with neoplasms. Exome-sequencing data from the ARRA Autism Sequencing Collaboration was compared to that of a control cohort from the Exome Variant Server database revealing that rare, coding variants within oncogenes were enriched for in the ARRA ASD cohort (p-8). In contrast, variants were not significantly enriched in tumor suppressor genes. Phenotypically, children and adults with ASD exhibited a protective effect against cancer, with a frequency of 1.3% vs. 3.9% (p</div- Dataset
- Dataset
- Biochemistry
- Cell Biology
- Genetics
- Molecular Biology
- Biotechnology
- Cancer
- Science Policy
- Mental Health
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- coding variants
- 54 age group
- Oncogene Mutations
- neoplasm
- phenotypic aspect
- 14 age group
- Decreased Cancer Rate Autism spectrum disorder
- oncogene
- tumor suppressor
- Pleiotropic effects
- control cohort
- autism phenotype
- neurodevelopmental condition
- oncology medications
- odds ratio
- tumor suppressor genes
- 29 age group
- ARRA Autism Sequencing Collaboration
- oncogenic pathways
- ARRA ASD cohort
- Exome Variant Server database
- cancer syndromes
- cancer genes
- CI