8 research outputs found

    GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER AND RELATED QUANTITATIVE BEHAVIORAL TRAITS

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    Autism is a heritable neurodevelopmental disorder that presents heterogeneously across the life course. Increasing prevalence, high co-occurrence with psychiatric and medical conditions, and health disparities underscore the need for prevention and tailored interventions. Past research has demonstrated genetic and environmental factors impact both likelihood of diagnosis and severity of related symptoms. However, only a handful of studies have investigated joint contributions of genetics and the environment to these outcomes. We undertook three complementary studies to address this gap in research. For the first two, we recruited mothers and their children with autism from the Simons Powering Autism Research for Knowledge study and collected autism-related behavioral outcomes, genetic data, and pregnancy exposure histories. We tested for gene-environment interaction effects using both categorical diagnosis of autism and quantitative traits as outcomes. In Aim 1, we measured genetic burden using traditional polygenic scores for autism (PGS-ASD) and in Aim 2 we developed complementary, functionally informed gene expression risk scores (GeRS-ASD). We found interactions between GeRS-ASD and eclampsia, but not PGS-ASD or other exposures, significantly increased odds of ASD among children. Joint effects on quantitative traits were generally widespread, both increasing and decreasing severity though some exposures were associated with specific traits. In Aim 3, our goal was to characterize joint and individual genetic and environmental influences on transcriptional variation, towards improving detection of specific effects. We used genetic and pregnancy exposure data from a prospective birth cohort, Markers of Autism Risk in Babies, to characterize effects of genetically regulated expression (GReX) on exposure-specific transcriptional variation. Differential expression in response to gestational diabetes mellitus during pregnancy was altered greatly after controlling for effects of GReX. These changes were pronounced for a subset of genes with stronger associations between GReX and assayed expression. We detected and characterized joint effects of common genetic influences and pregnancy exposures on autism and related outcomes, demonstrating a need and setting a foundation for larger scale research of this nature. Future work should also further examine joint and independent contributions to exposure-dependent transcriptional variation, with potential implications for understanding etiologic mechanisms

    Functional genomics analysis of Phelan-McDermid syndrome 22q13 region during human neurodevelopment

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    Phelan-McDermid syndrome (PMS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by varying degrees of intellectual disability, severely delayed language development and specific facial features, and is caused by a deletion within chromosome 22q13.3. SHANK3, which is located at the terminal end of this region, has been repeatedly implicated in other neurodevelopmental disorders and deletion of this gene specifically is thought to cause much of the neurologic symptoms characteristic of PMS. However, it is still unclear to what extent SHANK3 deletions contribute to the PMS phenotype, and what other genes nearby are causal to the neurologic disease. In an effort to better understand the functional landscape of the PMS region during normal neurodevelopment, we assessed RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) expression data collected from post-mortem brain tissue from developmentally normal subjects over the course of prenatal to adolescent age and analyzed expression changes of 65 genes on 22q13. We found that the majority of genes within this region were expressed in the brain, with ATNX10, MLC1, MAPK8IP2, and SULT4A1 having the highest overall expression. Analysis of the temporal profiles of the highest expressed genes revealed a trend towards peak expression during the early post-natal period, followed by a drop in expression later in development. Spatial analysis revealed significant region specific differences in the expression of SHANK3, MAPK8IP2, and SULT4A1. Region specific expression over time revealed a consistently unique gene expression profile within the cerebellum, providing evidence for a distinct developmental program within this region. Exon-specific expression of SHANK3 showed higher expression within exons contributing to known brain specific functional isoforms. Overall, we provide an updated roadmap of the PMS region, implicating several genes and time periods as important during neurodevelopment, with the hope that this information can help us better understand the phenotypic heterogeneity of PMS.Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatic

    Placental methylome reveals a 22q13.33 brain regulatory gene locus associated with autism

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    Abstract Background Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) involves complex genetics interacting with the perinatal environment, complicating the discovery of common genetic risk. The epigenetic layer of DNA methylation shows dynamic developmental changes and molecular memory of in utero experiences, particularly in placenta, a fetal tissue discarded at birth. However, current array-based methods to identify novel ASD risk genes lack coverage of the most structurally and epigenetically variable regions of the human genome. Results We use whole genome bisulfite sequencing in placenta samples from prospective ASD studies to discover a previously uncharacterized ASD risk gene, LOC105373085, renamed NHIP. Out of 134 differentially methylated regions associated with ASD in placental samples, a cluster at 22q13.33 corresponds to a 118-kb hypomethylated block that replicates in two additional cohorts. Within this locus, NHIP is functionally characterized as a nuclear peptide-encoding transcript with high expression in brain, and increased expression following neuronal differentiation or hypoxia, but decreased expression in ASD placenta and brain. NHIP overexpression increases cellular proliferation and alters expression of genes regulating synapses and neurogenesis, overlapping significantly with known ASD risk genes and NHIP-associated genes in ASD brain. A common structural variant disrupting the proximity of NHIP to a fetal brain enhancer is associated with NHIP expression and methylation levels and ASD risk, demonstrating a common genetic influence. Conclusions Together, these results identify and initially characterize a novel environmentally responsive ASD risk gene relevant to brain development in a hitherto under-characterized region of the human genome.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/173873/1/13059_2022_Article_2613.pd

    SPARK: A US Cohort of 50,000 Families to Accelerate Autism Research

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    The Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative (SFARI) has launched SPARKForAutism. org, a dynamic platform that is engaging thousands of individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and connecting them to researchers. By making all data accessible, SPARK seeks to increase our understanding of ASD and accelerate new supports and treatments for ASD
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